...that's what a bijection does... — jorndoe
Not sure it's worthwhile mentioning the obvious, but that's what a bijection does — jorndoe
If your first statement were true, then your second statement would also be true. But your first statement is false, so your second statement is also false.And the infinite interval is composed of infinitely many finite intervals. Thats a contradiction that proves bijection is plain wrong. — Devans99
That is actual impossibility, not logical impossibility. It is completely irrelevant to pure mathematics--the science of drawing necessary conclusions about formal hypotheses--whether anyone could ever actually pair up the members of infinite sets."Infinite" is commonly defined in such a way that it is impossible, by definition, to pair up infinite things, because the task would never be complete. — Metaphysician Undercover
If your first statement were true, then your second statement would also be true. But your first statement is false, so your second statement is also false. — aletheist
I think I will maybe adopt 'things need a non-zero length to exist' as an axiom. — Devans99
∞ = ∞ * 100 — Devans99
Interesting. So consider length, the human concept of length. It has no length, being a non-physical thing. But it exists. And remember that axioms are guesses, that we call axioms partly to make them sound more credible and scientific, but mainly because we cannot prove them, so we assert them instead, without a shred of evidence or justification. If we could prove them, we would. When we can't we pretend: axioms. — Pattern-chaser
..always remembering that it is mathematically invalid to divide both sides of the equation by infinity. You did remember that, right? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Sorry I have given up on the maths of infinity. What is the point of having a quantity (infinity) that you can do nothing with mathematically; you cannot add/subtract/multiply/divide without hitting a contradiction... sort of my point... every way we turn, infinity leads to contradictions. It's too illogical to be a real world concept. — Devans99
An axiom should be more than a guess IMO. The original definition of axiom was 'self evident truth'. — Devans99
You can do all kinds of things with infinity mathematically, but what you cannot do is treat it as if it were just another quantity. Infinity is a different kind of thing from any discrete number, no matter how large (or small).What is the point of having a quantity (infinity) that you can do nothing with mathematically; you cannot add/subtract/multiply/divide without hitting a contradiction. — Devans99
You can do all kinds of things with infinity mathematically, but what you cannot do is treat it as if it were just another quantity. Infinity is a different kind of thing from any discrete number, no matter how large (or small). — aletheist
That is actual impossibility, not logical impossibility. — aletheist
If pigs had large and powerful wings, then pigs could fly. The truth of this hypothetical proposition is not affected by the fact that pigs do not actually have large and powerful wings. If one were to pair all of the integers with the even numbers, then one would never run out of even numbers while still having integers left. Again, the truth of this hypothetical proposition is not affected by the fact that one cannot actually pair all of the integers with even numbers. — aletheist
A square circle is logically impossible because the definition of a square and the definition of a circle are mutually exclusive — aletheist
There is no such incompatibility between the definition of an integer and the definition of an even number; in fact, the alleged paradox is rooted in those very definitions, which place no finite limitation on either set. — aletheist
It illustrates that actual impossibility does not entail logical impossibility.How is this relevant? — Metaphysician Undercover
No; the whole point here is that pairing the members of infinite sets cannot actually be completed, yet it is still logically possible."Pairing" is a task which requires completion. — Metaphysician Undercover
It illustrates that actual impossibility does not entail logical impossibility. — aletheist
No; the whole point here is that pairing the members of infinite sets cannot actually be completed, yet it is still logically possible. — aletheist
They will just insist there is a contradiction. When you ask then to formally show the contradiction, they will just say it's weird, or that it's not possible to actually map two infinite sets or something like that. — MindForged
pairing infinite numbers is contradictory due to the definitions of "pairing" and "infinite". — Metaphysician Undercover
why?
Actually, I take that back. Mapping an infinity of one sort against anther is a common mathematical practice. So you are wrong, or talking about something else. — Banno
As explained in my last several posts, pairing infinite numbers is contradictory due to the definitions of "pairing" and "infinite". — Metaphysician Undercover
One more time: The fact that no one can actually pair all of the integers with corresponding even numbers has no bearing whatsoever on its logical possibility.But that's irrelevant because I was only arguing logical impossibility all along, which as I explained is the only real form impossibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually impossible, but not logically impossible. Just ask a mathematician.It is the definition of "infinite" which necessitates that pairing infinite sets is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
All I can do is demonstrate logically that it is impossible to map an infinite number because this is contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Tell me the exact formal definition of a mathematical mapping and infinity within the context of form mathematics and prove the contradiction. — MindForged
One more time: The fact that no one can actually pair all of the integers with corresponding even numbers has no bearing whatsoever on its logical possibility. — aletheist
What you have shown is that you refuse to understand mathematics. — Banno
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