All I can suggest at this point is looking into the standard mathematics of infinity. — aletheist
Between any two points that we mark on a line, there is an inexhaustible continuum of other potential points; — aletheist
No doubt they would say the same about your arguments here.I've looked at it; its rubbish. — Devans99
You remain wedded to the mathematics of discrete quantity. Again, there are no points on a continuous line, unless and until we mark them as discontinuities.A point has length 0. How many points on a line segment length 1? 1/0=UNDEFINED. — Devans99
No doubt they would say the same about your arguments here — aletheist
Contradictions indicate an underlying logic error; paradoxes indicate a need to think more carefully.Paradoxes indicate an underlying logic error (actual infinity exists). — Devans99
How many times must I repeat that I am arguing for real continuity, not actual infinity, and that these are two distinct concepts? — aletheist
In Peirce's model of a true continuum, the infinity is potential rather than actual. The real is not coextensive with the actual (existence); there are also real possibilities and real (conditional) necessities.I see no model of continuity that does not need actual infinity. If you point me to such a model, I stand corrected, but they all seem to use actual infinity. — Devans99
No, any real continuum could potentially be subdivided infinitely; it can never actually be subdivided infinitely. See the difference?Any real continuum can be subdivided infinity so it it exists in the present or the past, it must support an actually infinite number of sub-divisions. — Devans99
Actual infinity, if it existed, would be a quantity greater than all other quantities, but:
There is no quantity X such that X > all other quantities because X +1 > X
Now you could define:
∞ + 1 = ∞
But that implies:
1 = 0 — Devans99
Didn't you know that the mathematics of infinity is a kludge put there to force it into the arithmetic we use on finite numbers? — Pattern-chaser
No, any real continuum could potentially be subdivided infinitely; it can never actually be subdivided infinitely. See the difference? — aletheist
How on earth could you construct a continuum? It requires us to construct an actual infinity of possible positions for particles to occupy. — Devans99
No, that progress itself through the space-time continuum (i.e., motion) is the fundamental reality; any discrete subdivisions of space and time are our arbitrary constructions.So in both cases our progress through time and space subdivides the continuum to an actual infinity. — Devans99
No, that progress itself through the space-time continuum (i.e., motion) is the fundamental reality; any discrete subdivisions of space and time are our arbitrary constructions. — aletheist
Yes, I did.You did not answer my argument that the information content of a larger region of space-time must be larger than a smaller region of space-time? — Devans99
... or in this case, a "region of space-time."It begs the question to presuppose discrete units of "information" (i.e., points or finite segments) that comprise a "real line." — aletheist
As soon as you talk about comparing the "amount" of something, you are quantifying it, and thereby treating it as discrete--i.e., begging the question.The information can be in analog form; number of bits is merely a way to quantify it ... all volumes of space-time contain the same amount of information no matter what size is clearly contradictory. — Devans99
What part of "motion is more fundamental than position" do you still not understand? Giving the position of something to any degree of precision requires measuring its distance from an arbitrary reference point at an arbitrary instant using an arbitrary unit.the fact that position is given to infinite precision by the continuum means it is contradictory — Devans99
Only if you presuppose that time is discrete, like the film in a motion picture.Film is a good analogy for time. — Devans99
As soon as you talk about comparing the "amount" of something, you are quantifying it, and thereby treating it as discrete — aletheist
What part of "motion is more fundamental than position" do you still not understand? Giving the position of something to any degree of precision requires measuring its distance from an arbitrary reference point at an arbitrary instant using an arbitrary unit. — aletheist
a) Imagine a second and a year
b) By the definition of continuous, both time period are graduated identically (to infinite precision).
c) So there must be the same information content in both (same number of time frames: ∞)
d) But a year should contain more information than a second
e) Reductio ad absurdum, time must be discrete — Devans99
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