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Quote from: Bill S on 02/06/2013 23:06:00It should take infinite time to reach the end of an infinite series. I can do it in a finite time, and I can even prove it.
It should take infinite time to reach the end of an infinite series.
Quote from: lightarrow on 05/06/2013 22:37:17Quote from: Bill S on 02/06/2013 23:06:00It should take infinite time to reach the end of an infinite series. I can do it in a finite time, and I can even prove it.Cool, let's see the proof.
Ok. I have set to take 1 second to reach the first term of the series, 0.5 seconds to reach the second term, ... (1/2)n-1 seconds to reach the n-th term, ...Summing all the times, I reach the end of the series in 2 seconds.
Quote from: ligharrowOk. I have set to take 1 second to reach the first term of the series, 0.5 seconds to reach the second term, ... (1/2)n-1 seconds to reach the n-th term, ...Summing all the times, I reach the end of the series in 2 seconds.No; because when you reach the n-th term, or any other, you are still infinitely far from the (non-existent) end.
While you worry about it, I have already reached the end in 2 seconds, as I wrote. If you don't believe it, explain how you could still be in some term of the series after 10 seconds...
The definition of an infinite set is that any proper subset has the same size as the whole set. The elements of the subset can be mapped one-to-one with the members of the whole set.
I don't know whether Cantor used the set of all infinite sets in his calculations (do you have a source for this?),
What precisely does the truly in 'truly infinite' mean? It is generally accepted that there are multiple infinite sets; e.g. the real numbers are infinite, the whole numbers are infinite, neither set contains the other. If you introduce your own concept of 'truly infinite' that way, you're not talking about the same thing; and I don't see how it has any coherent meaning - can you explain?
Surely this is the definition of a countably infinite set, so, at best it is part of the definition of a mathematical infinity.
I used the term "truly" infinite so as not to confuse what I was talking about with "absolutely" infinite. I did this because it is easy to argue, as you did, that absolute infinity is a mathematical infinity. Indeed, I was not " talking about the same thing".
Quote from: lightarrow on 06/06/2013 10:01:17Ok. I have set to take 1 second to reach the first term of the series, 0.5 seconds to reach the second term, ... (1/2)n-1 seconds to reach the n-th term, ...Summing all the times, I reach the end of the series in 2 seconds.Ah, Zeno would be proud Problem is, you're trying to do an infinite number of actions in a finite time, and each action takes a finite time
Lightarrow is correct that at any particular step you take a finite amount of time, but the total time taken if you complete the infinite number of steps is also finite.
What we do know is that current models do assume infinitely small things exist since space is continuous.
You have to go over calculus?
Quote from: JP on 07/06/2013 13:36:43Lightarrow is correct that at any particular step you take a finite amount of time, but the total time taken if you complete the infinite number of steps is also finite.But, of course, you can't complete an infinite series...
QuoteWhat we do know is that current models do assume infinitely small things exist since space is continuous.Not all current models assume that; for example, Loop Quantum Gravity is quite popular, and potentially resolves the problem of singularities (by removing them).
Of course you can! Lightarrow just did so mathematically. You can't write down all the terms explicitly, but you can complete it or write the series symbolically as he did.
Quote from: JP on 07/06/2013 19:10:45Of course you can! Lightarrow just did so mathematically. You can't write down all the terms explicitly, but you can complete it or write the series symbolically as he did.Summing it, or writing it symbolically isn't what I had in mind. What exactly do you mean by 'complete'? It seems to me that if you could complete it, you could give me the value of the final term - but there isn't one.
He completed it by writing down an expression for all the terms and then summing them. The set 1/2n, when n is a whole number is the expression for all the terms. Like I said, explicitly writing out all the terms is impossible physically, since we can't write arbitrarily fast. But since both of these methods are abstract mathematical notation for the series, why should we afford one more importance than the other in a mathematical sense? In a physical sense, the existence of infinities is a matter of opinion whether continuous things exist or not or whether the universe is infinitely large or not--at least until we get some evidence to back up theories one way or the other.
Were you talking about Cantor's Absolute infinity?
For him it was a kind of mathematical deity, possessing a reflection principle that every property of the Absolute Infinite is also held by some smaller object.
Personally, I think this is a step beyond the coherent, but I'm no set theorist.