1) Actual Infinity is larger than any other number
2) Actual infinity plus one is larger than actual infinity
3) Hence there is no number larger than all other numbers
4) Actual Infinity does not exist — Devans99
There are less squares than numbers because not all numbers are squares. Yet each number has a square so the number of numbers and squares must be the same.
He is trying to compare two actually infinite sets, IE comparing two undefined things. A set definition is not complete until all its members are interated. — Devans99
#1 is false because there are lots of infinities, with some being larger and smaller relative to others. — MindForged
Adding one member to an infinite set does not increase its cardinality — MindForged
Objects quantified over are not assumed to exist. — MindForged
A set is a well-defined collection, often characterized by sharing some property in common or holding to some specified rule. — MindForged
"My" definition (in actuality, the mathematical definition) of sets are clear and they allow for infinity. — MindForged
You are confusing determining if an object belongs to a set with whether or not the object does in fact belong to a set. — MindForged
You are making up definitions of sets, I'm literally using the standard mathematical definition which in fact captures many of our intuitions about collections and does so without any contradictions. — MindForged
Yes but my argument shows none of them exist because they are not constructable — Devans99
- So you are saying there is a number (cardinality) with the property that number plus one equals same number? X+1=X !!! — Devans99
Add one to the cardinality of the natural numbers. — MindForged
I can’t because cardinality is an undefined concept - it includes cardinality of actually infinite sets - which are not numbers so I can’t add one to it. — Devans99
Cardinality should be defined as the NUMBER of elements in a set. Actual infinity is not a NUMBER.
If it's an object then it exists. To be an object is to exist. There is no non-existent object, that's contradiction. You're just trying to find a semantic loophole, but you are really digging yourself deeper into a hole of contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Our disagreement is over what constitutes a collection. I think that things must be collected to be a collection. You seem to think that things which are by some principle "collectible" are a collection. Clearly you are wrong, a collection must be collected, and collectible things do not constitute a collection. "Collection" often refers to the act of collecting. So it is quite clear that a collection does not exist until the things are collected in the act of collection. That is why an infinite set is utter nonsense, because it is absolutely impossible to collect an infinity of things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Absolutely not. Until you demonstrate how an infinity of things may be collected into a collection, your definition of sets does not allow for an infinite set. You are in denial, refusing to understand the words of your own definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, clearly we agree on the definition of a set, it is a collection. But nothing can belong to a collection without the act of collecting (collection), by which the thing is collected. And it's also very clear that an infinity of things cannot be collected. Therefore, according to the definition of 'set" which we both agree on, an infinite set is absolutely impossible — Metaphysician Undercover
This definition is self contradictory; the cardinality of the natural numbers is not a number as it claims. — Devans99
Universe is not under obligation" to come up with a concept of time for it's own use — Victoria Nova
Therefore transfinite cardinals are numbers — MindForged
Well transfinite cardinals have strange properties like:
X+1=X
X-1=X
What sort of number behaves like this? — Devans99
These properties are nonsensical compared to the properties of any normal number.
X+1=X
No other number, complex, vector, matrix, whatever, has this nonsensical property. — Devans99
But maths has a responsibility to make sure it clearly communicates concepts to its end users. — Devans99
Actual Infinity need to come with a health warning:
1) This is a conceptual concept only
2) Applying it to the real world is nonsense
3) It is logically inconsistent with the rest of maths and common sense (see Hilberts Hotel) — Devans99
It's not true that the "normal operations" can be performed with transfinite numbers. Analogous operations can be defined, but the are not the SAME operation. The fact that transfinite numbers have mathematical properties has no bearing on whether or not they have a referent in the real world - mathematics deals with lots of things that are pure abstraction with no actual referent (look into abstract algebra).It doesn't behave non-numerically, that doesn't make sense. The normal operations can be performed with such numbers, but that doesn't mean you'll get the results you would expect with finite numbers. And the reason is clear: Because you're dealing with a different type of number.
- Actual Infinity is larger than any other number — Devans99
- Actual infinity plus one is larger than actual infinity
- Hence there is no number larger than all other numbers
infinite number is a number that is larger than any finite number. An infinite number is not larger than any infinite number — Magnus Anderson
"Collection" does not refer the process of collecting things. If I talk about the collection of stars in the sky and I call that a set, no one thinks I've literally gathered the stars in the sky. They readily understand I'm mean that there's a condition each of those objects share (that is, "being in the sky") and that I'm grouping them into a collection. — MindForged
They refer to well defined groups of objects related by some common property, condition or rule and are referred to as a whole as a "Schmet" because OBVIOUSLY that's not a "set", supposedly. — MindForged
And unlike you, my definitions are actually used by virtually all modern mathematicians. — MindForged
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.