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, — SophistiCat
- So I have infinity X and a copy X’.
- I add one to X
- then X > X’ by common sense — Devans99
I don't see how an instantiated infinity could ever be established empirically since we can't count to infinity. — Relativist
I understand that maths has tried to build a consistent logical structure around the logical fallacy of the Actually Infinite and has failed. The numerous paradoxes attest to that. — Devans99
I understand that you do not understand what actual infinity is. — Magnus Anderson
Give me one example of the Actually Infinite from the material world. — Devans99
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. — MindForged
Wasn't it recognised several pages earlier that those insisting that there is a clear distinction between the terms 'Actual Infinity' and 'Potential Infinity' are Aristotelians, while the rest are not? Is there any hope of ever coming to a common understanding between Aristotelians and non-Aristotelians, given the fundamentals of their worldviews are so completely different? — andrewk
- The concept of potential infinity is useful as an approximation of the very large and small. Potential Infinity exists in the material world. — Devans99
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. — andrewk
We must all be grateful that this thread has finally come to light, so that the said mathematicians and scientists can be freed from the delusion under which they have been labouring. — andrewk
Really MU? There's no such thing as a sphere? — tim wood
Infinite sets very obviously contradictory? How about the set of numbers greater than two? The set of irrational numbers between zero and one? — tim wood
Honestly, I don't think mathematicians care about contradiction within they're work — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually no. Cantor's set theory is totally rigorous and logical. It doesn't fall into the paradoxes. And ZF-logic, basically developed in response to the paradoxes, is also sound. It has as an axiom of infinity.I understand that maths has tried to build a consistent logical structure around the logical fallacy of the Actually Infinite and has failed. The numerous paradoxes attest to that. — Devans99
What is sound about the ‘set of all sets does not exist’? It exists as much ‘as the set of Naturals’ yet it does not exist in set theory.
But anyway, neither of the above are fully defined sets. You have to list all the members to fully define a set. — Devans99
Actually no. Cantor's set theory is totally rigorous and logical. It doesn't fall into the paradoxes — ssu
You don't have to list out all the members of a set to define it. Seriously, sets are defined intensionally all the time. — MindForged
But a set is a list of elements, if you don’t list the elements you are missing out the definition of the set. — Devans99
When we say ‘the set of bananas’ we are not defining a set, just specifying the selection criteria for the set which is a different thing from the actual set.
For example the actual set of bananas has a cardinality so clearly the actual set definition contains more information than the selection criteria.
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