No, it doesn't. 4 might be twice two, but what could it mean to say it has twice the information? — Banno
So your mind is not in the real world? Infinity is not a thing like my cat or last Tuesday? What's going on here? Is infinity a thing like my mortgage? Like a unicorn? — Banno
That is not how real numbers work. By such (il)logic, there should be twice as many integers as even numbers, which is also not the case. A discrete collection of four items obviously does contain twice as many objects as a discrete collection of two items, but a continuum (such as space-time) does not consist of discrete items at all. The unwarranted axiom here is that reality consists entirely of discrete items and collections thereof.The interval 4 is twice the length of 2 so it should contain twice as many real numbers. — Devans99
By such (il)logic, there should be twice as many integers as even numbers, which is also not the case. — aletheist
Incidentally, recognizing this is the key to dissolving Zeno's famous paradoxes. — aletheist
There are twice as many integers as even numbers within any finite (and even) interval, but neither the set of all integers nor the set of all even numbers is finite. — aletheist
I said nothing whatsoever about "equal amount" or "infinite interval," concepts that mistakenly treat infinity as if it were extremely large, but still finite. How many integers are there? Infinitely many. How many even numbers are there? Infinitely many. If we paired up each integer with an even number, when would we run out of even numbers, but still have integers left? Never.You are claiming ... An equal amount of integers and even numbers in an infinite interval — Devans99
As summarized by Wikipedia, the arrow paradox states, "If everything is motionless at every instant, and time is entirely composed of instants, then motion is impossible." If motion is a more fundamental reality than position, and space-time is a true continuum, then both premises here are false--nothing is ever completely motionless, and time is not composed of discrete instants.They do nothing to resolve the paradox of the arrow, so far as I can tell. — MindForged
You may be right. — Banno
One more time: Mathematical infinity is not an actual infinity, but it is a real infinity. If we paired up every number with its square, when would we run out of one or the other? Never. How is this a contradiction? — aletheist
How many integers are there? Infinitely many. How many even numbers are there? Infinitely many. If we paired up each integer with an even number, when would we run out of even numbers, but still have integers left? — aletheist
If we paired up every number with its square, when would we run out of one or the other? Never. — aletheist
Yes I think so. It was all motivated by misplaced belief I think: Cantor an Co thought God was infinite so infinity was shoe-horned into mathematics for that reason.
Nothing wrong with having a finite-sized God IMO. — Devans99
The problem being that we cannot pair them up because there is an infinite number of either one of them. — Metaphysician Undercover
A proposition is not contradictory merely by virtue of stating something that is actually impossible, only if it states something that is logically impossible--which is certainly not the case here. Mathematics has to do with the hypothetical, not the actual.The fact remains that we cannot actually pair them because there is an infinite number of them. So the proposition states something which is, by definition, impossible (i.e. it is contradictory). — Metaphysician Undercover
A proposition is not contradictory merely by virtue of stating something that is actually impossible, only if it states something that is logically impossible--which is certainly not the case here. — aletheist
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