so anything that is "in our minds only" cannot be real — aletheist
Right, we call such things fictions. Unicorns are not real because they are as they are only because people think of them that way.No I mean some things can exist in our mind and not in reality — Devans99
There is nothing illogical about infinity or true continua, and the fact that they cannot exist (be actual) does not entail that they cannot be real.Illogical things like inanimate objects that talk. Or infinity. Or a true continua. — Devans99
We determine the meaning of a word by referring to how it is used in our society. This mean that the colloquial conception is the correct one. If mathematics is using a conception of "infinite" which is inconsistent with the colloquial conception, then this is an indication that they have not properly represented "infinite"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Zeno's paradoxes were adequately resolved by Aristotle's distinction between actual and potential. — Metaphysician Undercover
The principles of modern mathematics do not resolve Zeno's paradoxes because the philosophers of mathematics have simply produced an illusory conception of "infinite", which is inconsistent with what we are referring to in colloquial use of the term. That's sophistry, and Platonic dialectics was developed as a means to root out and expose such sophistry. The sophists would define a word like "virtue" in a way which suited their purposes, and then profess to be teachers of this. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not true. What I am arguing is that if we change the defining features of a thing, then we are not talking about the same thing any more. Therefore we ought to give it a different name so as to avoid confusion. This is not a case of correcting a misconception, it is a case of introducing a new conception. We cannot say that one is a correction of a misconception, because they are distinct conceptions, having distinct defining features. The new conception ought to be named by a word which will not cause confusion with the old conception, or any sort of equivocation. For example, if the defining feature of parallel lines is that they will never meet, and someone says that they've come up with a new geometry in which parallel lines meet, then we ought not call these lines parallel, but use a term other than "parallel" in order to avoid confusion and the appearance of contradiction. They are distinct conceptions, not a correction of a misconception. Likewise, the new conception in mathematics, which is called "infinite" ought to bear another name like "transfinite" so as not to confuse the conception with what we commonly call "infinite". — Metaphysician Undercover
That's ridiculous. I am saying no such thing, and I resent that because I have great respect for mathematicians, they are as far from "idiot" as you can get — Metaphysician Undercover
The principles of modern mathematics do not resolve Zeno's paradoxes because the philosophers of mathematics have simply produced an illusory conception of "infinite", which is inconsistent with what we are referring to in colloquial use of the term. That's sophistry, and Platonic dialectics was developed as a means to root out and expose such sophistry. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle believed actual infinities were impossible but they are not — MindForged
But I just showed that infinity is not a number. It definitely does not play by logical rules (see Hilbert's Hotel and all the other paradoxes of infinity). Nature on the other hand does play by logical rules. No place for magic in nature so no place for infinity either.
Maths describes reality to a high degree... no infinity in maths suggest no infinity in nature. — Devans99
hierarchy of infinities — MindForged
Infinity is defined to be bigger than anything else. That means there can only be one infinity by definition. — Devans99
I suspect that I have encountered them, but it was a while back and I never got very far. I am aware of a few different approaches that seek to capture a true continuum mathematically, such as nonstandard analysis and smooth infinitesimal analysis. Again, I concede that the real numbers are an adequate model for almost all mathematical purposes.Have you read up on the hyperreals before? — MindForged
Like Peirce, I prefer to say that it is really infinite, but not actually infinite. I also join Peirce in denying that numbers exist--i.e., I am not a mathematical Platonist--even while affirming that they are real.The cardinality of the set of natural numbers is actually infinite — MindForged
Indeed, and that is the precisely point that you and I have been trying to make throughout this thread, albeit from somewhat different perspectives. Trying to treat infinity/continuity no differently from finite/discrete quantities is what leads to severe misunderstandings.The point of the "paradox" (not an actual paradox, just a strange thought experiment) is to point out that infinity is weird and does not work the way most people could naturally understand without learning some of the mathematical logic underlying our theories of infinity. — MindForged
Right, and Peirce proved that the power of the set of all subsets of a given set is always greater than the power of the original set itself--which entails that there is no largest multitude (his term for aleph). What he called a true continuum is "supermultitudinous," larger than any multitude, and thus impossible to construct from (or divide into) discrete elements. You might find this introductory article about "Peirce's Place in Mathematics" interesting.Aleph-null is larger than any natural number certainly, but aleph-null is smaller than the size of the continuum. Cantor proved this fact with a proof by contradiction (the Diagonal Argument). — MindForged
Again, I concede that the real numbers are an adequate model for almost all mathematical purposes. — aletheist
Like Peirce, I prefer to say that it is really infinite, but not actually infinite. I also join Peirce in denying that numbers exist--i.e., I am not a mathematical Platonist--even while affirming that they are real. — aletheist
Right, and Peirce proved that the power of the set of all subsets of a given set is always greater than the power of the original set itself--which entails that there is no largest multitude (his term for aleph). What he called a true continuum is "supermultitudinous," larger than any multitude, and thus impossible to construct from (or divide into) discrete elements. You might find this introductory article about "Peirce's Place in Mathematics" interesting. — aletheist
Unicorns are not real because they are as they are only because people think of them that way... — aletheist
I think the question is whether the Planck time is properly described as a discrete "unit of time" or as a limitation on our ability to mark and measure time, which in itself is truly continuous. Needless to say, I lean toward the latter. — aletheist
I consider the real numbers to be an adequate model of any continuum for we can measure an arbitrarily small or large quantity without any problem. — TheMadFool
My understanding is that conceptualizing a true continuum requires the acceptance of infinitesimals. — aletheist
It captures most or all of the features of that usage but without any contradictions at all. — MindForged
This is a claim there is no reason to accept. Aristotle believed actual infinities were impossible but they are not. — MindForged
. For there to be a potential infinity, there has to be a predefined set of values that can be occupied otherwise the domain is precluded from study as it can change arbitrarily by an arbitrary amount. — MindForged
That domain is actually infinite. — MindForged
This is just an outright misrepresentation. Mathematicians did not simply redefine infinity to mean something contrary to its colloquial usage to disingenuously prove things about it. And hold this thought, I'll come back to it later when you say something inconsistent with the above. — MindForged
"Defining features" are, ironically by definition, established by the definition in use. Otherwise we would never had words whose meaning varies across context and circumstance due to the resemblance in those varying contexts. — MindForged
Contrary to your geometry misunderstanding, the reason parallel lines can meet is that the reason they cannot meet in Euclidean Geometry is because of how space is understood there (as planar). In Riemannian geometry, Euclidean space is understood simply as a space with a curvature of 0. But if space is curved then the provably such lines do intersect, such as on the surface of a sphere (i.e. lines of longitude). The actual Euclidean definition of what a parallel line is does not say the lines will not intersect. It's that if you have some infinite Line J, and a point P not on that line, no lines passing through P intersect with L. This does not hold if the space is different. It's only when one misstates the Parallel Postulate that it sounds contradictory to have intersecting parallel lines. You are forgetting that these notions are defined by the geometry, not separate from them. — MindForged
There are two fundamental mistakes here: first, infinitesimals are not units; second, a continuum is not composed of infinitesimals.Infinitesimals does not resolve the problem because infinitesimals are units. So to model a continuum as infinitesimals is to model it as composed of discrete units. — Metaphysician Undercover
Forms are only actualities when and where they are instantiated in concrete particulars. In themselves, as distinct from Matter, they are real possibilities.What we know, study, and understand, are all forms and forms are by definition actualities. — Metaphysician Undercover
It violates the laws of classical (bivalent) logic, but that is not the only kind of logic available to us. For example, we can reason without the law of excluded middle using intuitionist logic. In fact, the law of excluded middle does not apply to infinitesimals; rather than discrete points, they are analogous to indefinite "neighborhoods" with an inexhaustible supply of potential points.Potential is defined that way, it defies the law of excluded middle. There is an aspect of reality which is impossible for us human beings to understand because it violates the laws of logic, and this is "potential". — Metaphysician Undercover
There are two fundamental mistakes here: first, infinitesimals are not units; second, a continuum is not composed of infinitesimals. — aletheist
It violates the laws of classical (bivalent) logic, but that is not the only kind of logic available to us. For example, we can reason without the law of excluded middle using intuitionist logic. In fact, the law of excluded middle does not apply to infinitesimals; rather than discrete points, they are analogous to indefinite "neighborhoods" with an inexhaustible supply of potential points. — aletheist
No, infinitesimals are not units, and they are not "distinct things."Yes, infinitesimals are units, they are bounded necessarily in order to give them the status of distinct things "infinitesimals". — Metaphysician Undercover
False, infinitesimals are real but indefinite--i.e., potential not actual.However, it is necessary that either the boundaries are real in order that the infinitesimals are real, or else the boundaries are not real, in which case neither are the infinitesimals. — Metaphysician Undercover
How so? By "potential" I simply mean real possibility, rather than actuality. As Peirce put it, "the word 'potential' means indeterminate yet capable of determination in any special case" (CP 6.185; 1898, emphasis in original).Right, but doing this only gives "potential" a different definition, just like mathematics gives "infinite" a different definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, infinitesimals are not units, and they are not "distinct things." — aletheist
Right back at you.You seem to have little understanding of what "infinitesimals" refers to. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I already stated, a continuum is not composed of infinitesimals. Moreover, there is no ultimate compatibility between a continuum and the numbers--or anything else discrete.If these continuities, space, time, and matter, could be conceived of as composed of infinitesimals (units, like monads) we could establish compatibility between a continuum and the numbers. — Metaphysician Undercover
The only reason for positing infinitesimals (in contrast to points) is to preserve those basic, primitive intuitions of continuity, rather than resorting to (wrongly) treating a continuum as if it were composed of discrete units.So the question is whether these basic, primitive intuitions which hold space, time, and matter as continuous are correct, or are these things which appear to be continuous, more appropriately represented by the discrete units, infinitesimals. — Metaphysician Undercover
Moreover, there is no ultimate compatibility between a continuum and the numbers--or anything else discrete — aletheist
The only reason for positing infinitesimals (in contrast to points) is to preserve those basic, primitive intuitions of continuity, rather than resorting to (wrongly) treating a continuum as if it were composed of discrete units. — aletheist
Likewise, it is impossible by definition that numbers can represent a true continuum — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously, this is what I disagree with. The mathematical conception of "infinite" clearly contradicts the colloquial definition of "infinite", I've demonstrated this over and over again, so you know what I mean and I will not demonstrate it here again. You simply assert that it does not contradict, while the evidence is clear, that it does. — Metaphysician Undercover
What he demonstrated is that anything eternal is necessarily actual, while anything infinite has the nature of potential. The latter, that the infinite belongs in the class of potential, must be read as a definition, a description, derived from observation. All instances of "infinite" are conceptual, ideas, and ideas are classed in the category of potential. From this premise, along with other premises, the conclusion that anything that is eternal is necessarily actual is derived. — Metaphysician Undercover
The whole point of "potential", under Aristotle's philosophy is that it cannot be studied as such. What we know, study, and understand, are all forms and forms are by definition actualities. "Matter" being classed as "potential", just like "ideas", is that part of reality which is impossible for us to understand. Potential is defined that way, it defies the law of excluded middle. There is an aspect of reality which is impossible for us human beings to understand because it violates the laws of logic, and this is "potential". Therefore, by its very definition, it is precluded from the study which you refer to. To assign a set of values, in order to study that domain is simple contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
See, you have taken the category which is defined by "that which cannot be studied", "potential", which consists of matter, ideas, and the infinite, and you've applied some values (which is contradictory), and now you claim that this thing "infinite" is no longer in that category, it's in the category of actual. All you have done is changed the subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
We identify a thing (law of identity), this thing as identified, becomes our subject, and we proceed to understand it through predication. The "defining features", how the subject is defined, ensures that the subject represents the object. This is known as correspondence, truth. It is evident therefore, that "defining features" is determined by correspondence between the logical subject and the object which is said to correspond to that subject, and not by "the definition in use". If it were the "definition in use" which defined the subject everything would be random with no correspondence to reality It is clear that "the definition in use" must be consistent with the known correspondence, truth. When the definition in use is not consistent to provide a correspondence with the identified object, we can correct the definition, saying that you are using an incorrect definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
So this is very wrong because you have reified space, as if "space" were the subject, and there is a corresponding object which has been identified as "space". There is no such object being described here in geometry. The objects are all mathematical, conceptual, such as a "line". My point was that if there are two distinct concepts of "line", then there are two distinct objects referred to by that name "line" corresponding to the defining features which constitute the two distinct subjects under that name, "line". Therefore "line" ought not be used for identification of both of these objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Continuum to me implies a smooth transition between two points. — TheMadFool
However, we can choose arbitrarily small units and do any measurement. What I mean is we can make any quanitification arbitrarily smooth depending on our needs for accuracy or whatever. — TheMadFool
You misread what you quoted. I said the mathematical conception has no contradictions, I didn't say it was identical to the colloquial definition. The colloquial understanding of infinity includes, for example, a notion of unboundedness. And yet we know infinities are in some sense bounded, and people will readily admit that the real between 0 and 1 are infinite despite that clearly being a bounded array of values. That's just an obvious case of a colloquial, folk conception being contradictory and hence the need for a formal understanding which we got from mathematics. — MindForged
We don't derive from observation that the infinite is relegated to ideas — MindForged
All current theories of spacetime that are more grounded than speculative (e.g. LQG isnt mainstream right now) require space and time to be infinitely divisible and no observation contradicts this at all. In fact, attempting to make those finite will result in inconsistencies more than likely. So no, observation does not require one to class the infinite as merely potential, a mere idea that cannot be found in the world. — MindForged
And in any case, the way you're talking about potentiality sounds contradictory. It's being spoken of as if it's ineffable. And yet you're telling me about it and what makes it ineffable... Which means youre talking about it, so it's not ineffable. — MindForged
This sounds incredibly wacky. For one, even if there is some metaphysical violation of Excluded Middle, that doesn't preclude it from human understanding nor does that make reality "violate the laws of logic" because there are not "the" laws of logic. There are many such sets of laws, and some drop Excluded Middle. It would certainly be a surprise to the Intuitionists that they don't understand constructive mathematics or their own logic because it doesn't assume EM as an axiom. — MindForged
And this is all besides the point anyway. The nonsense you tried to pass off earlier was the idea that there are "defining features" of things like parallel lines despite now knowing that these terms are defined by the user's (implicitly or explicitly). They don't have inherent definitions, they're defined within a certain domain. So the idea that you tried to push that parallel lines don't intersect is purely based off the underlying assumptions of the geometry in which you made an assumption of, it is not true writ large in geometry. The Parallel Postulate is only true inasmuch as it's assumed to be so in a geometry and anyone saying otherwise is just misinformed about how mathematical formalisms work. — MindForged
I haven't reified anything, I didn't treat these as anything other than abstract mathematical constructs. — MindForged
Contrary to your geometry misunderstanding, the reason parallel lines can meet is that the reason they cannot meet in Euclidean Geometry is because of how space is understood there (as planar). In Riemannian geometry, Euclidean space is understood simply as a space with a curvature of 0. But if space is curved then the provably such lines do intersect, such as on the surface of a sphere (i.e. lines of longitude). — MindForged
"Infinitesimal point" is self-contradictory--points are, by definition, dimensionless and indivisible; infinitesimals are, by definition, dimensional and potentially divisible without limit. As I have stated repeatedly, in my view an infinitesimal is not a discrete unit of any kind, and a continuum is not composed of infintesimals.Infinitesimal points were introduced to allow that a multitude of infinitesimals may have dimensionality, therefore a continuous line could be conceived of as being composed of infinitesimal points. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, as I have acknowledged, the real numbers serve as a sufficient model of a continuum for almost all purposes within mathematics; but it is still a model, not a true continuum itself.Isn't that sufficient for a continuum model? — TheMadFool
Infinitesimal point" is self-contradictory--points are, by definition, dimensionless and indivisible; infinitesimals are, by definition, dimensional and potentially divisible without limit. As I have stated repeatedly, in my view an infinitesimal is not a discrete unit of any kind, and a continuum is not composed of infintesimals. — aletheist
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