No clue, I could not find it, I only know that he works on it — Lionino
And sometimes people post questions about mathematical subjects that have bearing on philosophy, such as about infinities, incompleteness and computability. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'll believe that he has anything when I see it. Especially, does he purport to offer an axiomatic system? I don't recall, but perhaps he rejects the axiomatic method. — TonesInDeepFreeze
concepts like infinity, incompleteness, and even computability, extend beyond mathematics. So, the mathematical approach is only one approach to such concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
To say that such concepts are the domain of mathematics, therefore mathematicians ought to define them — Metaphysician Undercover
Except incompleteness (in the sense of the incompleteness theorem). — TonesInDeepFreeze
The philosophy of mathematics is a rich area. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That's a specific, restricted definition of "incompleteness". The term is slightly different in physics for example. So this is an example of what I am talking about. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mathematics also uses a specific, restricted definition of "infinite" — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such a thing as "infinite" number. See this is an illusion, and source of the confusion.Yes, for example as in "infinite number" where "infinite" is a property of "number". — RussellA
Mathematics must have been believing in Philosophy's assistance in clarifying the tricky concepts. :snicker:I said math and philosophy have different way of doing things
— Corvus
They certainly do, which is why I’m wondering what a thread on mathematics is doing on a philosophy forum. — Joshs
Infinity is a property of motion or action — Corvus
There is no such a thing as "infinite" number. See this is an illusion, and source of the confusion.
Infinity is a property of motion or action, nothing to do with numbers. Infinite number means that you keep adding (or counting whatever) what you have been adding (or counting) to the existing number until halted by break signal (as can be demonstrated in computer programming).
A set containing 3 numbers can be made infinite, when it is in the counting Loop 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3 .... ∞ Therefore a term "infinite number" is a misnomer. I bet my bottom dollar that you will never find a number which is infinite, because it doesn't exist. If it did exist, then it is not an infinite number. — Corvus
In mathematics, the extended real number system is obtained from the real number system by adding two infinity elements: +∞ and −∞, where the infinities are treated as actual numbers.
"What is the number line to infinity?Extended real number line — Michael
The philosophy of mathematics is a rich area.
(1) Unfortunately, cranks, who are ignorant and confused about the mathematics post incorrect criticisms of the mathematics, from either a crudely conceived philosophical or a crudely imagined mathematical perspective. That calls for correcting their misinformation about the mathematics itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
it seems barmy to talk about different size of the infinite sets — Corvus
except it can be used as an adjective, so stop being a dumb cunt who only seems to know "maf." — Vaskane
If that is the case, then it seems barmy to talk about different size of the infinite sets. — Corvus
if there are infinite whole numbers, and there are infinite decimals between 0 and 1, and there are infinite decimals between 0.1 and 0.12, and there are infinite decimals between 0.1111111 and 0.1111112 [...] — an-salad
Which is the exact same boneheaded mistake you made on the other post about infinity. — Vaskane
As I wrote before: ""infinity" as an adjective means something along the lines "any known set of real numbers can be added to"". — RussellA
doesn't equate to math — Vaskane
Language is bendable, and often done so for artistic effect. — Vaskane
'infinity' is not an adjective. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is that why you felt the need to correct me when I said
To me it's just silly to argue the point of how big an infinity is when infinity is a concept considering continuity, not size.
— Vaskane
Because it was UNREASONABLE for me to not assume mathematics simply because numbers were involved? That's the real Dunning-Kruger here. — Vaskane
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