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If we represent nothingness by zero then minus one is actually something.
Must there not be a difference between mathematical "nothing" and physical "nothing"?
If that is the case, it must be very loosely related, as infinity is not measurable
The set of counting numbers is (countably) infinite.ie you can count how many of them there are by drawing a 1 to 1 correspondence with the counting numbers (which is particularly easy to do, in this case).There are an infinite number of numbers in this set.
From the definition of 'infinite', infinite number equates to immeasurable number. Is it really a '1 to 1' correspondence? My conclusion is, the mind lacks the ability to conceptualize the idea of something with a beginning and no end.Assignment for today:How do you measure a stick with only one end?
In my view, change is constant, and the product of the forces that govern the interaction between matter and energy in said space.
The stick is not infinite in length since it terminates at one end. The is no such thing as half of infinity so there is a dilemma here. This is always the problems with human conceptions of infinity.
OK with that; but you still have divisions of infinity. If you remove one such division, what are you left with? Infinity -1?
I can make an infinite number of true statements......
I think that if you have an infinite Universe, there are no divisions of it, that I know of.
Agreed. However, if you admit change, then you have the universe before, and after, each change; thus you have divisions. I would argue that in infinity there can be no change.If the cosmos is infinite, there can be no change within the cosmos. You may ask how I equate that with the idea that the Universe is "part" of the cosmos, and the Universe, manifestly, changes. Hopefully we'll get there. but res unum post alium
According to my interpretation, your interpretation that, "there can be no change" within the cosmos, could be a violation of the set of invariant natural laws.
For example, since it is in accord with the natural laws that when there is the presence of matter and energy, there is going to be continual change, then it is natural that there would be change within the “one boundless, eternal, contiguous space”.
It could also be a violation of some unknown divine edict, but unless we know what that invariant natural law, or divine edict might be, how can we base a scientific argument on either?
Let’s consider a single change in “the one boundless, eternal, contiguous space”. This space has always existed in a specific state. Then comes change; after which its state is different.
Is this not like Jeffrey’s stick; it “is not infinite in length since it terminates at one end”?
We won't ever know if there was ever nothing. We can assume that there wasn't ever nothing but that is by choice.
Let's make a bid for clarity: Is infinity a number? What is "an infinite number of" anything?
For the infinite series of positive integers can we start counting from the highest and count downwards?
Would we ever reach zero?
Could we find a highest number to start from? If so isn't that a finite series?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 12/11/2017 15:10:59For the infinite series of positive integers can we start counting from the highest and count downwards?There is no highest, it is an infinite series to the high side.Quote Would we ever reach zero?If you could find a starting point to count backwards from, you could reach zero, but the premise of staring from the highest number in an infinite series is flawed.Quote Could we find a highest number to start from? If so isn't that a finite series?That is a no and a yes, .
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 12/11/2017 15:21:30Quote from: jeffreyH on 12/11/2017 15:10:59For the infinite series of positive integers can we start counting from the highest and count downwards?There is no highest, it is an infinite series to the high side.Quote Would we ever reach zero?If you could find a starting point to count backwards from, you could reach zero, but the premise of staring from the highest number in an infinite series is flawed.Quote Could we find a highest number to start from? If so isn't that a finite series?That is a no and a yes, .Exactly! So how is an infinite series countable if you can't count from the highest to lowest?