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No, *your* interpretation of infinity is wrong. Infinity is not a number. The usual arithmatic with infinity does not follow the same rules one would expect to find with real numbers:1 + ∞ = ∞1000000 x ∞ = ∞∞ x ∞ = ∞
Quote from: ChiralSPOInfinity is not a number..................there are an infinite number of infinities.Do you not think those two statements are contradictory?What is an infinite number, if it is not a number?
Infinity is not a number..................there are an infinite number of infinities.
A pink elephant is an elephant, not a pink.
"Seeing pink elephants" is a euphemism for drunken hallucination.
Pete, you seem to have withdrawn from our part of the discussion. My wife read the last post I addressed to you and said: "What do you expect, you've offended the man!" Such was not my intention, and if you took offence, I apologise.
Pete, are you, or have you ever been a school teacher? I ask this because your responses so often seem to follow the pattern: “This is the answer to your question; whatever your question was.”I will do my best to keep to one question at a time, and if you answer just that question, perhaps we can make progress.....Does the cosmological principle apply to anything that did not originate in the Big Bang?
Jeffrey, have you seen the "calculator" here? http://www.einsteins-theory-of-relativity-4engineers.com/TabCosmo7.htmlI've been trying to get my head round it with limited success, but have still found it useful.
Pete, I've also found a question of mine that you have not answered. May I prompt you?"Does the cosmological principle apply to anything that did not originate in the Big Bang?"
I'm not posting anymore in this thread
There is a road of infinite length, in the middle of which there is a bridge. How do I know the bridge is in the middle? I know that because the road must extend to infinity on either side.
One night the Finite Defence League blow up the bridge, so no one can cross from one side to the other. We know that the road extends to infinity in both directions, but can each section really be considered infinite?What do we have? Is it two halves of infinity, two infinite roads or two finite roads?Intuitively, one might say that, as each half goes to infinity, we must have two infinite roads. That seems more reasonable than "two halves of infinity".
However, consider that if you are at a point (eg 1km from the bridge site) along the road, and you travel towards the break; in 1km you come to the end of "infinity". Does this make sense?
Because we reach an end, whichever side we approach from, it is tempting to argue that the road segments are finite. However, if members of the People’s Infinite Front decide to repair the bridge, but they are infinitely far away along the road; can they ever reach the bridge? The answer must surely be “no”.
Wait! This can’t be right. If they were infinitely far away, they were at the end of the road, which is not possible if the road has no end.
Could it be that the PIF are infinitely far from the bridge, but their infinity is smaller than that of the road, or of this segment of the road? Am I alone in thinking that this is rubbish?
Does this mean that infinity is relative? It would seem to suggest that, but what does that mean?
If one declares that our universe is closed, one must ask: What is outside? If we say; "nothing", one must ask: What is nothing if not more space?
Quote from: Ethos_ on 18/10/2014 01:33:31If one declares that our universe is closed, one must ask: What is outside? If we say; "nothing", one must ask: What is nothing if not more space?Nothing. Space isn't nothing. It sustains waves and fields. I can conceive of space having an edge, rather like a water droplet has an edge. A ripple in the droplet would reach the edge and then undergo total internal reflection. I can imagine light waves doing the same when they reach the edge of space. Beyond which there is no more space.
Then again. A vacuum reduced is nothing, and if you like 'infinite', as it has no bounds intrinsically. Assuming one want to bound it, one need to introduce some property more that the idea of a 'nothing'. Do you see?