Banno
Zeno's paradox is a convergent series, dude. It doesn't matter what order you sum it in. — frank
frank
but that simply does not stop it being traversed in a finite time.
Zeno mistook an infinite description of motion for an infinite obstacle to motion. — Banno
Ludwig V
Of course. The ghost at the feast, perhaps.My apologies for my curtness. I'v'e in mind heading off a divergence into discussions of rules. — Banno
Well, one could simply argue that the argument is not a proof, but a reductio of a certain approach to space, time and infinity.Zeno saw himself as proving that all motion is an illusion. You're saying that he's wrong, but you aren't providing an argument. That's fine. — frank
sime
Metaphysician Undercover
No one ever says either of those things. You're arguing with someone in your head who knows no more about mathematics than you do. — Srap Tasmaner
...there are an infinite number of steps in this description of the distance between 0 and 1, but that simply does not stop it being traversed in a finite time. — Banno
Unless Zeno can find a fault in that calculation, it proves that the issue is in the approach to the question, not in the situation as described. — Ludwig V
To represent motion in a way that avoids the paradox, requires a smooth and differentiable continuous topology that doesn't contain points that are in need of traversal, but only open sets that can finitely intersect to create spots, but not infinitely often so as to create points. Yet on the other hand, to represent positions requires a discrete point-based topology of infinitely thin spikes that doesn't blur position information. Hence motion and position require incompatible topologies. — sime
No need to overcomplicate things. — Banno
sime
Or, we can represent motion as discontinuous, which is the way that quantum physics seems to demonstrate is the real way. The particle has a position, then it has another position, without traversing the intermediary. I believe, that what happens in between cannot completely be represented as "a smooth and differentiable continuous topology". Issues with the wavefunction demonstrate that this is not quite right. So what happens in between ought to be represented as truly unknown, though it is actually represented in a not very accurate way, as a continuous topology of superpositions. — Metaphysician Undercover
ssu
Or it was a critique of Plato and other mainstream philosopher's idea of the potential infinite.Zeno mistook an infinite description of motion for an infinite obstacle to motion. — Banno
ssu
No, but the issue in the core of Zeno's paradoxes. And we should note that calculus had problems with the infinitesimals, like the famous critique from bishop Berkeley.I think we should consider the fact that Newton and Leibniz didn't invent calculus for the purpose of solving Zeno's paradox, but for describing trajectories under gravity. — sime
Banno
If we want calculus to solve Zeno's paradox, we have to assume that the math is telling us something about space and time. — frank
frank
Applying the Mathematical Continuum to Physical Space and Time: As noted in §1.2, the ‘received view’ of Zeno (developed in the latter part of the Twentieth century by philosophers developing the ideas of Grünbaum 1967) aimed at showing how modern mathematics resolves the paradoxes. However, central to this project was the recognition that a purely mathematical solution is not sufficient: the paradoxes not only question abstract mathematics, but also the nature of physical reality. So what they sought was an argument not only that Zeno posed no threat to the mathematics of infinity but also that that mathematics correctly describes objects, time and space. It would not answer Zeno’s paradoxes if the mathematical framework we invoked was not a good description of actual space, time, and motion — SEP
Banno
See how explicit the admixture of two differing language games is here?So what they sought was an argument not only that Zeno posed no threat to the mathematics of infinity but also that that mathematics correctly describes objects, time and space. — SEP
What we have are ways of talking, language games, a grammar, or a paradigm - whatever you want to call it. Infinity is a mathematical notion that we can use to calculate physical results. It is not an ontology.One can argue that calculus doesn't solve Zeno's paradoxes as we don't have yet a clear understanding of infinity. — ssu
Banno
frank
So the paradox involves confusing a way of talking, the maths, with a description of how things are, the ontology. We can be pretty confident that space is not infinitely divisible and yet still use calculus to plot satellite orbits. — Banno
frank
Well, he was, from what we know, arguing that motion was not real. — Banno
Paradoxes occur when we say things incorrectly. The world cannot be wrong, but what we say about it can be. — Banno
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.