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Pete, sometimes you surprise me.
Quote from: jeffreyHIn 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.You're reasoning is wrong. An boundless universe with uniform mass density has an infinite number of galaxies, particles, stars and planets in it and thus an infinite amount of matter.Think of the universe like you would a 3D Cartesian coordinate system where a particle is located at the intersection of every grid point where a grid point is the point is of the forum (x, y, z) where x, y, z are all integers. Then the distance between all particles is finite yet the number of particles is infinite.
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.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 21/09/2014 01:35:20Quote from: jeffreyHIn 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.You're reasoning is wrong. An boundless universe with uniform mass density has an infinite number of galaxies, particles, stars and planets in it and thus an infinite amount of matter.Think of the universe like you would a 3D Cartesian coordinate system where a particle is located at the intersection of every grid point where a grid point is the point is of the forum (x, y, z) where x, y, z are all integers. Then the distance between all particles is finite yet the number of particles is infinite.Anything bounded cannot be infinite. The particles are bounded by an infinite extent.
Is that good or bad?
In this post is it good or bad?
The gravitational force F exerted by an object of mass m decreases as m/r2, so F→0 as r→∞ . Physical reality? Well we can measure any F > 0, so it's real Now the force exerted by a mass 2m decreases as 2m/r2, so F→0 as r→∞' and clearly ∞' > ∞
You're reasoning is wrong. An boundless universe with uniform mass density has an infinite number of galaxies, particles, stars and planets in it and thus an infinite amount of matter.
A 3D Cartesian coordinate system is unbounded,
i.e. it's infinitely large,
Is my understanding OK so far?
Now double the mass, so to measure any given value of F you have to stand √2 times as far away, so r tends to a different infinity as F tends to zero.
Quote from: Pete You're reasoning is wrong. An boundless universe with uniform mass density has an infinite number of galaxies, particles, stars and planets in it and thus an infinite amount of matter. Pete, I feel sure Jeffrey will correct me if I’m wrong here, but I don’t think this responds to the point he was making. “….there can never be an infinite amount of distance between any two particles as that would place a boundary on infinity.”
A particle must be somewhere. Two particles must occupy two places. If we say there is an infinite distance between these two places,
How is that reasoning wrong?
Therefore when F = 0, you are further away. But r1 → ∞, so r2 must tend to a greater infinity.
If, as seems to be the case, you are saying it is impossible for two particles to be an infinite distance apart; I'm very happy with that.
The point here is that any system that can normally be considered as bounded cannot include an infinite component.
Precisely.
Let me make this very clear first; [infinity] is not a number.
Indeed there is an infinite number of rational numbers between any two integers.
r1 → ∞, but it could never reach infinity.
r2 → ∞, but it could never reach infinity.
Your reasoning is impeccable, as long as you consider infinity as a finite distance, which, manifestly it is not.
In this, and all of your examples, you are using mathematical infinities; I have no problem with that, and your arguments make perfect sense, as long as one remembers that mathematical infinities are approximations.
Quote from: JeffreyH The point here is that any system that can normally be considered as bounded cannot include an infinite component. It’s all coming together; but wait! A little voice in the depths of my mathematical ignorance says: “What about the interval from 1 to 2? This is bounded on both sides by an integer, yet - Quote from: alancalverd Indeed there is an infinite number of rational numbers between any two integers.
The clever bit is that they all mean "the beautiful sadness of the oppressed". Or was my Welsh neice lying about the song she sang at the last Eisteddfodd?