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It seems that not all mathematicians agree with this.https://www.math.toronto.edu/mathnet/answers/infinity.html
“Number systems come in many sizes. There is the "natural number system", which is just the set of numbers used in counting: 1, 2, 3, 4, and so on. Or, one can expand this number system to include additional concepts, such as negative numbers, fractions, even the so-called "imaginary" numbers (which are not really imaginary at all). Each of these concepts exists provided we look for it in the context of a large enough number system. Now the question is, does infinity exist in the same way that these concepts (negative numbers, fractions, etc.) do? In other words, does there exist any number system which, as well as including the familiar numbers we are used to, also includes an "infinity" concept? The answer is no;”
One way to see this is to think, what would infinity minus 1 be? It couldn't be a finite number, since no finite number plus 1 equals infinity. So it must be infinite, and this would mean infinity - 1 = infinityFrom this one can immediately see that the rules of arithmetic must be violated, since if they held one could subtract infinity from both sides to conclude that -1 = 0, which isn't true.
...in which "infinity" would mean something one can treat like a number.
Quote from: Bill S on 29/11/2014 21:52:49It seems that not all mathematicians agree with this.I suspect there's no field of human knowledge where everyone agrees about everything.
It seems that not all mathematicians agree with this.
Quote from: dlorde on 29/11/2014 22:51:46I suspect there's no field of human knowledge where everyone agrees about everything.I beg to differ!
I suspect there's no field of human knowledge where everyone agrees about everything.
4. If there had ever been (absolutely) nothing, could there be something now? Yes.There is something now, and something cannot come into existence without a cause/reason.
Ponder this.If time is a causal factor, why are quantum predictions expressed as probabilities?
While watching animations on the display, are there really 'moving pictures'?
While watching a plane fly toward the horizon, is it the plane or its image, getting smaller?
As the main carer for two disabled family members I have little time to spare, ..
..when I hind a few minutes I tend to spend it interacting with others on line rather than trying to find the specifics of calculus or complex numbers that might, or might not, help.
Some time ago I downloaded a calculus course which has remained unstarted somewhere on my external HD; maybe I should find it and have a go. []
Quote from: JohnDuffield on 30/11/2014 14:24:45Quote from: dlorde on 29/11/2014 22:51:46I suspect there's no field of human knowledge where everyone agrees about everything.I beg to differ! [)] []
Quote from: phyti39 on 30/11/2014 18:22:34Ponder this.If time is a causal factor, why are quantum predictions expressed as probabilities? Time is an abstract mental picture we humans define as change in progress. Time does not cause change, change is the evidence that time has passed.Quote from: phyti39While watching animations on the display, are there really 'moving pictures'?No, but photons are moving between the screen and your eyes. And pixels have also changed places and colors.Quote from: phyti39While watching a plane fly toward the horizon, is it the plane or its image, getting smaller?This question is a bit silly. Hold your finger up very close to your eyes, observe it's apparent size then move it to arms length. If you'll notice, it now appears smaller compared to when it was very close to your eyes. Are you prepared to suggest that just because your finger now appears smaller than when very close to your eyes that is has somehow shrunken?The divergence of light is the reason for the phenomenon of perspective, not because the object has reduced in size.
We exist in an infinite cosmos in which there is no change or differentiation. Every “part” is the whole. Nothing happens, everything just “is”.
Phyti39; you raise some interesting points, some of which I would like to return to when time permits. In the meantime, this puzzles me:Quote4. If there had ever been (absolutely) nothing, could there be something now? Yes.There is something now, and something cannot come into existence without a cause/reason.Shouldn't that have been "No"?
There was nothing (a physical universe), then one came into existence. Since the elements (energy or matter) had no prior existence, they can't be used to bootstrap themselves into exixtence.
Time does not cause change is my argument against "change cannot happen without time".
There was nothing (a physical universe), then one came into existence.
Since the elements (energy or matter) had no prior existence, they can't be used to bootstrap themselves into exixtence.
There's a whole slew of them in particle physics which have been seen in the lab merely "popping into existence" from the inertial energy which is already there.
This is one of the fascinating things about science; scientists seem to be able to claim that the "inertial energy which is already there" is nothing, yet maintain that it can give rise to something. I'm willing to believe that I have missed something; but I wish someone would explain what it is. My suspicion is that "nothing" is used in different ways, with different meanings, in different contexts, and that the trouble comes when the contexts get crossed over.
To a physicist, the first version of nothing of is simply empty space with nothing in it. You wouldn' t have any particles, all the radiation and so, there's literally nothing in it. But that nothing is actually quite complicated because of quantum mechanics and relativity. It turns out empty space is a boiling, bubbling brew of virtual particles, popping in and out of existence in a time so short that you can' t even measure them.