That's an appeal to authority. — Metaphysician Undercover
modern mathematics is full of contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
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). — Relativist
I'm assuming a sphere. Or is a sphere not possible? — tim wood
I don't see how an instantiated infinity could ever be established empirically since we can't count to infinity. — Relativist
On the other hand, I think in some cases, infinity can be ruled out. For example: the past cannot be infinite. Here's my argument:
1. It is not possible for a series formed by successive addition to be both infinite and completed.
2. The temporal series of (past) events is formed by successive addition.
3. The temporal series of past events is completed (by the present).
4. (Hence) It is not possible for the temporal series of past events to be infinite.
5. (Hence) The temporal series of past events is finite. — Relativist
I myself believe Absolute Infinity as an mathematical entity exists. It's just a personal hunch that it is so. — ssu
Is there a theory of Absolute infinity? Please tell me if there is!!!You don't need any hunches in order to believe that a mathematical entity exists: all you need is a mathematical theory that says that such and such entity is infinite - and such mathematics exists, there is no question about that. — SophistiCat
Interestingly, addition and multiplication of real numbers, of rational numbers, and of integers, are also all different from the addition and multiplication of integers:[addition and multiplication of transfinite cardinals is] technically not the exact same operation [as addition and multiplication of the natural numbers] — MindForged
I don't see how an instantiated infinity could ever be established empirically since we can't count to infinity. On the other hand, I think in some cases, infinity can be ruled out. — Relativist
If a model that makes use of infinities provides a good fit for many observations, is parsimonious, productive, fits in with other successful models, etc. then we consider it to be empirically established, infinities and all. — SophistiCat
Starting with the natural numbers, every time we enlarge the set of numbers, the algebraic properties change. There's no reason for us to be surprised when it changes yet again when we move from the reals to the cardinals (including transfinite cardinals). — andrewk
The surface of a sphere is a finite quantity. It is also unbounded. It's reasonable to plot a path on the surface of a sphere. We do it all the time. What would you say the sum of the distances of the possible paths on the surface of a sphere is? And the surface of the sphere is just exactly a collection of those paths. I guess it's aleph-c and maybe greater, but not less. — tim wood
Please cite some. I always did like a good contradiction, and if you're right then very likely there are not just a lot of them, but an infinite number of them. — tim wood
My initial points were that infinity isn't inherently off the table when talking about reality, as the OP and another user were arguing that infinity is a contradictory concept (which is just flatly untrue); so if anything in reality is infinite or not is an empirical matter, there's no strictly logical argument against it being instantiated. Anyway, sorry if I was unclear! — MindForged
It can't be all that obvious, since so many mathematicians and scientists have failed to observe the contradiction, and some of them have been reputed to be quite bright."infinite set" which is very obviously contradictory.
The problem is that spheres are only conceptual, — Metaphysician Undercover
Is there a theory of Absolute infinity? Please tell me if there is!!! — ssu
But an infinite past still entails an infinite series that has been completed; that is the dilemma. Consider how we conceive an infinite future: it is an unending process of one day moving to the next: it is the incomplete process that is the potential infinity. The past entails a completed process, and it's inconceivable how an infinity can be completed. — Relativist
Mathematical entities are abstractions, they have only hypothetical existence. — Relativist
How is this different from the infinity of mathematical operation of dividing 3 into 1? Just because it equates to an infinity of 3's after the decimal doesn't imply infinity exists in the world. — Relativist
Ah, you didn't know the issue. It's basically about what Georg Cantor proposed. See here.OK, so you make a distinction between something you call "Absolute" infinity and any other sort of infinity. I don't know what that difference is, and it doesn't look like you have a very definite idea either. — SophistiCat
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