it's two ways of defining instances of the same concept. — MindForged
Really MU? There's no such thing as a sphere?
— tim wood
That's right, "sphere" is conceptual only. Take any object which appears to you to be a sphere, and examine it under a high power microscope and you will see that it really is nota sphere. — Metaphysician Undercover
Objects such as "numbers greater than two", and "irrational numbers numbers between zero and one" are not well defined because the cardinality is unknown. You cannot have a "well-defined" set in which the cardinality is an unknown factor. — Metaphysician Undercover
They don't produce two different concepts. — MindForged
Sez you On what authority? The set of rationals is easily defined. Look, these posts of yours are merely displays of ignorance. Is that what you're about? If you want to learn and find out about these things. Youtube is an excellent entry source for information about them. You have an opportunity to learn. Take it.Or the ‘set of rationals’ - not defined and is undefinable — Devans99
The set of rationals is easily defined — tim wood
Really, there's no evidence any of standard mathematics entails a contradiction, provided you actually use the definitions mathematicians actually use. — MindForged
That's an ideal sphere. Nowhere did I mention an ideal sphere. — tim wood
Ok, integers greater than two; that's a distinct cardinal And also the irrationals are a distinct cardinal. Now it's time for you to start making sense. Can you do that? Make sense or make your case? — tim wood
Is it ever reasonable to believe in something that is inconceivable? What would one actually be believing in? — Relativist
Yes, conceivability is subjective, but conceptions can be intersubjectively shared, analyzed, and discussed. — Relativist
I, for instance, do not find the beginning of time to be any easier to conceive than an infinite past, — SophistiCat
I've explained to you how "infinite set" is clearly contradictory. Also it's quite obvious that the waythe concept of "imaginary numbers" treats the negative integers contradicts conventional mathematics. You can rationalize these contradictions all you want, trying to explain them away, but that is just a symptom of denial, it doesn't actually make the contradictions not contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Um, no. Literally you're entire argument is that "collection" and "set" are necessarily finite because of the definition your use. Your argument is without any force because it's indisputable that mathematicians don't use your definitions of these terms. It's entirely besides the point to try and claim they're incorrect for doing so by the means you're doing it. It's like saying "marriage" is definitionally between men and women and so the idea of gay marriage is a contradiction. — MindForged
Actually, I define terms like "set" "collection", "object", and "infinite", in the ways normally accepted in philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
1) A "set" is a well defined collection.
2) A collection which has an unknown cardinality is not "well-defined", in any mathematical sense.
3) If a collection were infinite its cardinality would necessarily be unknown.
4) Therefore an infinite collection cannot be well defined in any mathematical sense, and cannot be a "set". — Metaphysician Undercover
Unless you can argue that the notion of a one-to-one correspondence is logically incoherent — MindForged
We are comparing two undefined things and we get nonsense. — Devans99
The cardinality of the set of natural numbers is the transfinite number aleph-null. — MindForged
This is demonstrated by simply looking at the mathematical means of determining the cardinality of a set, namely when we known sets have the same size as other sets. Any set which can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with a proper subset (meaning sharing some of its members but not having all of them of itself) is what defines an infinite set. — MindForged
We know the exact cardinality of the set of natural numbers, real numbers (etc.) — MindForged
- The concept of a human face can be defined
- The ‘set of all human faces’ is a finite list so in principle is also definable
- the description ,set of all human faces’ is not a complete definition of the set — Devans99
Well one-one correspondence is logically flawed: There are the same number of natural numbers as square numbers? Surely a paradox - a sign we are dealing with a logically flawed concept. — Devans99
OK, now we're getting somewhere. You were not talking about "infinite", or "infinity", you were talking about transfinite numbers. Why didn't you say so in the first place? This thread appears to be concerned with the "actually infinite". Transfinite numbers are something completely different, and I guess that's what caused the confusion, you did not properly differentiate between these two, nor did you let me know that you were talking about transfinite numbers rather than infinity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wait, now you're claiming that this demonstration which you produced earlier shows that a transfinite number is infinite. Care to explain, because I really do not see any demonstration of that. — Metaphysician Undercover
Come on, give me a break. If you're not joking about this, then how gullible do you think I am? If you actually believe that you know the exact cardinality of the set of natural numbers, then show me the precise relationship between the cardinality of the following sets. The set of natural numbers between 1 and 100, the set of all natural numbers, and the set of natural numbers between 1 and 200, — Metaphysician Undercover
"Transfinite" is more of an artefact in mathematical language from times where there was some dispute about the numbers, no mathematician nowadays thinks such numbers are anything but infinite. — MindForged
I'm somewhat confused about the relevance to infinite sets. The set of natural numbers between 1 and 100 (call it "A") has a cardinality of 100. The set of natural numbers between 1 and 200 (call it "B") has a cardinality of 200. Set A cannot be put into a one-to-one correspondence with B since the cardinality of B is greater than that of A.
Neither A nor B can be put into a function with a proper subset of themselves (again, any subset will run out of numbers to pair with the parent set) and are therefore finite; try to match up 100 things with 200 things and you'll be able to see that's it's impossible to pair up one thing in one set with exactly one thing in the other set for all the members. This is exactly the difference between finite and infinite sets. Infinite sets can have parts of the set have the same cardinality as the entire set because you never can "run out" of members to pair up. That was the point of my earlier example with the Natural numbers and the Even numbers. — MindForged
A "sphere" (or "ideal sphere") is an abstraction, not an actually existing thing. You bring up another abstraction: the number of possible paths being infinite. This is hypothetical; in the real world, you cannot actually trace an infinite number of paths. So in the real world you cannot actually COLLECT an infinity. All you can do is to conceptualize.That's an ideal sphere. Nowhere did I mention an ideal sphere. Now why don't you address the point. You want a collected "infinity"? Take any sphere-like object. The number of possible paths on the sphere is not less than aleph-c. — tim wood
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