Thanks. So you simply extend the natural number to the extended natural number and resolve the problem of indexing. — MoK
The difference between an arithematic infinity and a spacial/geometric one is that in the former the numbers have no spatial size and can thus sum to a finite sum. In the latter there are infinite instantiated steps, hence Zeno. — Gregory
Thanks. So you simply extend the natural number to the extended natural number and resolve the problem of indexing.
— MoK
Yes exactly. — fishfry
Not "extended natural number". — TonesInDeepFreeze
I wouldn't, but suit yourself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Wrong. I explained the difference between them. Knowing the definition of 'the continuum' does not provide knowing the definition of 'continuous'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Do you mind elaborating? — MoK
You can call them whatever you want. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The standard ordering on the real numbers is not a well ordering. So talking about points of infinity as in the domain of a sequence is confusing at best. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The formulation you gave doesn't mention that the ordering includes the standard ordering on w; it only mentions that every member of w is greater than -inf and less than inf. — TonesInDeepFreeze
[emphasis added]Your obsessive pedantry is leading you astry. — fishfry
Your penchant for making discussions personal leads you astray. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The formulation you gave doesn't mention that the ordering includes the standard ordering on w; it only mentions that every member of w is greater than -inf and less than inf.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
LOL. Pedants 'Я' us. — fishfry
If only the standard analysis of the reals had been discussed, with infinity not a member and infinitesimals not (re)introduced, perhaps things would have terminated long ago. Maybe not, but I would guess most physicists don't dabble in non-standard analysis nor are they concerned with the roles of ultrafilters in pointless topology. I could be wrong but even introducing ordinals into the discussion opens a Pandoras Box. Just my opinion. — jgill
As a complex analysis guy you use the hypothetical point at infinity of the Riemann sphere all the time, don't you? — fishfry
ave correctly said that the poster is ignorant and confused about mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
ave correctly said that the poster is ignorant and confused about mathematics.
— TonesInDeepFreeze — Metaphysician Undercover
After many posts where I made no personal comments, I have correctly said that the poster is ignorant and confused about mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I take from fishfry (as an analogy in my thinking) that the extended reals have a point of positive infinity (inf) that is like w in this sense: inf is not itself an integer, but it is an extension that comes after all the integers. And w is not itself a natural number, but it is an ordinal that comes after all the natural numbers. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Only on rare occasion. Normally, Infinity for me means unbounded. I don't work on the Riemann sphere. Yes, projective stuff is there in the background, like circles with infinite radius are lines, etc. But I am very old fashioned. Here is the sort of thing that has interested me. — jgill
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.