The resolution of singularities is in part due to the precedence of them turning out to be the result of mistakes in our models. — MindForged
Are you aware that denying the actual infinite involves committing to one or the other of the following two propositions?
1. If we travelled far enough through the universe in a straight line we'd end up back where we started
2. The universe has a boundary. In that case, as Aristotle asked, what happens if we go to the boundary and poke a spear through it? — andrewk
But whatever mathematical formalism is used, they also make recourse to infinity. — MindForged
You either think it's true or not — MindForged
The natural numbers can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with a proper subset of itself. That makes it infinite. — MindForged
Imagine a spaceship that has an accurate odometer. We set the spaceship in motion and it travels across the universe. The reading on the odometer will always be finite no matter how far the ship goes. — frank
The usual objection to that is to ask - 'but what number did they start on?' to which the answer is 'they didn't start'. — andrewk
2. The universe has a boundary. In that case, as Aristotle asked, what happens if we go to the boundary and poke a spear through it? — andrewk
I'm just wondering, if the theoretical and actual worlds do not have common points of analogy, then nothing in one would relate to the other. — BrianW
That’s not correct, they make recourse to the limit concept which is not the same as actual infinity. — Devans99
If you accept relativity as pretty close to the truth you necessarily must accept that space is infinitely divisible (basically true in quantum mechanics too). Hell, a large chunk of quantum mechanical interpretations are relativistic as well so I don't even see the objection here.I believe and so I thought did everyone that relativity is a close approximation only of the large scale universe. The plank length is very small so reality is approximately continuous hence the theory works so well. — Devans99
But numbers just exist in our mind and our minds have finite capacity so numbers are finite in that sense. — Devans99
Singularities are nasty beasts, and there's a better reason for eschewing them than past experience: singularities blow up your model in the same way that division by zero does (division by zero is one instance of singularity); they produce logical contradictions. — SophistiCat
Yes; so an object with no start is a non-existent object; IE infinite time is impossible. Same argument for infinite space. — Devans99
No no no, calculus makes use of multiple legitimate infinities — MindForged
That's paradoxical. — frank
For every moment before time "t" there is another moment. — MindForged
The above refers to future which is potentially infinite which is not the subject of this thread. — Devans99
Past infinite time is however an Actual Infinity so is disallowed. For example this argument:
- Time is a series of moments
- The moments so far must be an actual number not infinity
- So time has a start — Devans99
For every moment before this very moment, there is another moment. — MindForged
Numbers aren't part of the mind — MindForged
I believe that leads to contradictions. For example, how could we ever reach today if the past stretches to negative infinity — Devans99
Time however is part of the physical universe so it can’t be actually infinite. — Devans99
Space is infinitely divisible — MindForged
If it is, it’s a potential infinity rather than an actual Infinity (you do understand the distinction?).
The division of space takes time, first we must cut one inch, then 1/2 an inch, then 1/4... No matter how many cuts we make we never get to actual infinity, just some small number. — Devans99
I'm saying that the nature of space itself is such that it is infinitely divisible already. — MindForged
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