There is an infinity between the numbers one and two because numbers are infinitely divisible. — Amergin
...whatever we want, and in our imaginations we can dispense with any need for consistency - or anything else at all; after all, it's just our imagination. But dreamland is not a reasonable ground for argument, so let's leave it.we can imagine... — Devans99
This is what you wrote, not me or anyone else. Since it's a finite number, likely it's calculable. Or at least describable. So, take your least width - to get the most - and tell us how many.If a number has non-zero width, that leads to a finite number of numbers between 1 and 2. — Devans99
Maybe this is it. Two very different meanings of "imagine."purely imaginary concept so we can imagine — Devans99
2) Finite means definite. But it's only definite for a particular value. But no particular value can be assigned, therefore not finite. — tim wood
When you get down to the nitty gritty and use numbers, as in a computer program, they are all rational and thus countable. So how many rational numbers (fractions) do you think lie in the interval [0,1]? :chin: — John Gill
Near as I can tell, all of your arguments are conditioned by an IF, whether belief, opinion, imagination, even small-i if. You use that IF as a fence behind which you indulge whatever your IF and your "imagination" will give you. Behind this redoubt you're unassailable, but also useless and a waste of time.As you can imagine I am not a believer — Devans99
I think step [6] above is no doubt questionable, but it brings out the point: how exactly does a finite number ever become infinite? - We have no basic arithmetical operators to convert finite numbers into infinite numbers. To focus on this aspect, here is a similar argument that more graphically brings out the discontinuity between natural numbers and infinity: — Devans99
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