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There is not a coherent 'English' description of Infinity -
You have to go to Maths for a safe way to define it
One increases faster than the other
so, however far you go, it is always bigger.
There are times, however, when you can use infinity more safely. For instance, if you add up the series of numbers1+1/2+1/4 + 1/8 +++ you will never get a total more than 2 - even for an infinite number of terms. We can use the word 'infinite' safely because the final result is finite. That is a 'convergent' series, as opposed to a 'divergent' series like the first two examples.
Studying what happens 'on the way' to infinity can give you a clue about what would happen if you just carried on and on. . . .
It's just too hard for a simple definition and you can't expect one any more than you can put Relativity or Quantum Mechanics in simple terms.
I think I have heard this used before to make people think they are inferior.
There is no 'value' for infinity. How could there be if it is the result of a process which has no limit?
As a school boy I tried to argue that zero times infinity was one from the arithmetical statement 1/0 equals infinity and 0/1 equals zero therefor 1/0 * 0/1 the zeros cancel out and one is left with 1/1 which equals one.My argument fell on deaf ears !
So, the possible amount of stars, molecules, atoms, quarks.We're looking up through the eye of infinity doing our best to count our way out:)
True:)But who will count it down if finite.An approximation will have to do.But that's not the number.So what we reach for, even if finite, will never be counted.