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If we have a right angled triangle and one side adjacent to the right angle is finite while the other adjacent side is infinite then the hypotenuse must be greater than infinity. What does this say about our view of infinity?
The notationmeans that the values of f(x) can be made arbitrarily large (as large as we please) by taking x sufficiently close to a (on either side) but not equal to a.
The point here is that any system that can normally be considered as bounded cannot include an infinite component.
I think that you're confusing infinity with a number. It means increases without bound. Let me make this very clear first; is not a number.
“It means increases without bound”. Would it not be better to use “boundless”?
Let me make this very clear first;is not a number.
Let me make this very clear first; is not a number.
IMHO if ever you bump into an infinity in physics, then something is wrong somewhere.
Quote from: JohnDuffieldIMHO if ever you bump into an infinity in physics, then something is wrong somewhere.Nonsense. It's beginning to become clear that the universe is flat and boundless and as such goes on forever, never ending. That's what it means to be infinite. It also appears to have approximate uniform mass density which means that there's an infinite amount of hadrons in the universe too.
Nonsense. It's beginning to become clear that the universe is flat and boundless and as such goes on forever, never ending. That's what it means to be infinite. It also appears to have approximate uniform mass density which means that there's an infinite amount of hadrons in the universe too.
Here's an old but very strong example (Cantor?) There is an infinite number of integers 1,2,3,.... because we can always add one more
It's beginning to become clear that the universe is flat, but it absolutely isn't clear that it goes on forever. IMHO this is a non-sequitur promoted by cosmologists who have an inadequate understanding of general relativity.
Just because words hold their conventional order in a phrase doesn't imply that the phrase means anything.
It is quite reasonable to refer to this as “infinite”, as long as everyone recognises that this is a mathematical infinity – not some sort of physical infinity.
In which case there can never be an infinite amount of distance between any two particles as that would place a boundary on infinity. So to all intents and purposes the contents of the universe is finite even though the universe itself may not be.