Yes, of course you are right. It is no more help than saying that a table is an object. I was trying to re-instate the line between, let us say, a mathematical reality and a physical reality - or between mathematical possibility and physical possibility. (I think we are agreed that what creates the difficulties here is the confusion of the two in the definition of the supertask.)Saying infinity is a concept doesn't actually tell us anything about it. I don't even know what it means to say infinity is a concept. Is there anything that isn't a concept? — fishfry
I suggest that what creates the problem here is the idea that the mathematical induction is a process that takes time. Perhaps the temptation to do this derives from the analogy with a Hume's inductive process that creates so many issues about empirical laws or generalizations. But once you pose the challenge of actually executing the process to the bitter (and non-existent) end, or think that you can stipulate what happens at the end, you are enmeshed in contradictions. (Achilles' race with the tortoise has exactly the same issues, but in the medium of space rather than time.) This leads us to think that there is some sort of miracle involved in arriving at the fridge to get a beer. But the mathematical induction is one analysis of many that can be applied to either space or time, and does not in any way affect our walking about our kitchen or arriving on time at a party.Remember the mathematical induction you brought up before? — Michael
There's no miracle. Motion isn't continuous; it's discrete. — Michael
That is why I am arguing that it is metaphysically impossible for an infinite succession of button pushes to end after two minutes. — Michael
Yes, of course you are right. It is no more help than saying that a table is an object. I was trying to re-instate the line between, let us say, a mathematical reality and a physical reality - or between mathematical possibility and physical possibility. (I think we are agreed that what creates the difficulties here is the confusion of the two in the definition of the supertask.) — Ludwig V
I understand that it has no end. That is why I am arguing that it is metaphysically impossible for an infinite succession of button pushes to end after two minutes. — Michael
0,1,0,...,10,1,0,...,0
Such sequences may make sense in the context of abstract mathematics but they do not make sense in the context of a lamp being turned on and off. — Michael
As a comparison, even though imaginary numbers have a use in mathematics it is more than just physically impossible for me to have -1‾‾√ — Michael
apples in my fridge; it is metaphysically impossible. — Michael
No pretend physics can allow for me to have an imaginary number of apples in my fridge and no pretend physics can allow for the above two mathematical sequences to model the state of a lamp over time. — Michael
With Thomson's lamp, these are our premises:
P1. Nothing happens to the lamp except what is caused to happen to it by pushing the button
P2. If the lamp is off and the button is pushed then the lamp is turned on
P3. If the lamp is on and the button is pushed then the lamp is turned off
P4. The lamp is off at t0
P5. The button is pushed at least once between t0 and t1
P6. The lamp is either on or off at t1
And these are our conclusions:
C1. If the lamp is on at t1 then the button was pushed to turn it on, prior to which it was off
C2. If the lamp is off at t1 then the button was pushed to turn it off, prior to which it was on
C3. The button was pushed n∈ℕ
�
∈
�
1
times between t0 and t1
These conclusions prove that a supertask is not performed. — Michael
Tell that to an electrical engineer or quantum physicist, both of whom use imaginary and complex numbers as essential tools of their trades. — fishfry
You really reject the complex numbers, negative numbers, fractions, and irrationals? — fishfry
It's a premise of the thought experiment that there is a sequence of steps at successively halved intervals of time. — fishfry
I already showed you how to model the process using the inverse powers of 2. You ignored that, since it refutes your argument. — fishfry
I said that I cannot have an imaginary number of apples in my fridge. — Michael
It's not like either number is somehow more physical than the other one — fdrake
I didn't say that imaginary numbers don't have a use. I said that I cannot have an imaginary number of apples in my fridge. — Michael
Yes, and this premise is proven false. See refutation by contradiction and modus tollens. — Michael
It doesn't refute my argument because it doesn't address my argument. — Michael
My argument is that the lamp cannot be on unless it is turned on (whether by pushing a button or by magic), as argued above. — Michael
Therefore, off, on, off, ..., on makes no sense in context. The lamp being off must precede the lamp being on. — Michael
Given that this is inconsistent with the premise that the button is pushed at successively halved intervals of time it is proven impossible in principle to push the button at successively halved intervals of time. — Michael
At midnight the Supreme Button Pusher flips a coin and turns the lamp on or off, accordingly. I don't see any problem. — fishfry
Thompson's lamp is not a good example of a supertask, because the sequence doesn't have a limit or any natural termination point. — fishfry
I don't think that either of them suggests that space or time may be discrete. In any case, you seem to accept that that's a different topic.Others do, like Zeno's and Bernadete's. — Michael
That seems to me to be a good diagnosis of the issue with supertasks. All that is then needed to free people from the illusion that walking to the fridge can be mathematically analysed in many ways, none of which affect physical reality.Such sequences may make sense in the context of abstract mathematics but they do not make sense in the context of a lamp being turned on and off. — Michael
The trouble is that many philosophers seem to be hypnotized by physics, and seem to forget that physicists develop their theories and conduct their experiments in ordinary human reality.I think there are abstract things and concrete things. But physics these days pushes hard on the nature of physical things. Is there a philosopher in the house? — fishfry
Spot on. The difference between analysis (in the head) and dissection (on the bench) seems obvious, but turns out to be quite difficult to trace in certain situations.At the very least you've got work to do in "dephysicalising" or "physicalising" the intuitions regarding number and processes you have. — fdrake
The trouble is that many philosophers seem to be hypnotized by physics, and seem to forget that physicists develop their theories and conduct their experiments in ordinary human reality. — Ludwig V
If the Supreme Button Pusher turns the lamp on at midnight then it must have been off before He turned it on, because that's what "turning on" means. If He turned it off at midnight then it must have been on before He turned it off, because that's what "turning off" means. — Michael
For the entire continuous time that the lamp exists – not just the time during which the button is pushed – it being off must precede it being on, regardless of magic or divine intervention. As such the sequence off, on, off, ..., on makes no sense, much like having an imaginary number of apples in the fridge makes no sense. — Michael
But also note P1 in the argument above, implicit in Thomson's argument. You don’t get to just introduce God to deflect from the incoherent causal consequence of having pushed a button an infinite number of times. — Michael
A supertask is just performing an infinite succession of tasks in finite time. Pushing a button, which just so happens to turn a lamp on and off, is as good a supertask as any. — Michael
But let’s assume that pushing the button displays the time that the button is pushed – persisting until the button is pushed again – and is pushed (only) at successively halved intervals of time starting two minutes to midnight. What time is displayed at midnight? — Michael
The sequence approaches midnight but because the button is never pushed at midnight the display can never show midnight, but must show something because it’s never turned off. It always only displays the time that the button was last pushed, but in this scenario there is no last button push, entailing a contradiction. — Michael
As Thomson says, "the impossibility of a super-task does not depend at all on whether some ... sequence is convergent or divergent." — Michael
Benacerraf (1962) pointed out a sense in which the answer is yes. The description of the Thomson lamp only actually specifies what the lamp is doing at each finite stage before 2 minutes. It says nothing about what happens at 2 minutes, especially given the lack of a converging limit. It may still be possible to “complete” the description of Thomson’s lamp in a way that leads it to be either on after 2 minutes or off after 2 minutes. The price is that the final state will not be reached from the previous states by a convergent sequence. But this by itself does not amount to a logical inconsistency. — SEP
For this reason, Earman and Norton conclude with Benacerraf that the Thomson lamp is not a matter of paradox but of an incomplete description. — SEP
the limit of a sequence has no immediate predecessor in the sequence, and that's just a mathematical fact — fishfry
Midnight. ... Of course the clock says midnight at midnight. — fishfry
Thompson's lamp is a rather poor example of a supertask, because its underlying sequence can not be made to converge to a limit. — fishfry
I'll concede your point that the lamp is impossible. That does not necessarily entail that supertasks in general are impossible. — fishfry
I have always accepted this; it's the reason that the supertask is proven impossible.
A lamp being off must always precede that lamp being on, and so the sequence off, on, off, ..., on cannot model a lamp. — Michael
If the button is pushed at 23:00 then the screen will display 23:00 until the button is pushed again at 23:30, and then the screen will display 23:30 until the button is pushed again at 23:45. — Michael
A supertask is any infinite succession of tasks performed in finite time. Having that task be to push a button is as good a task as any, regardless of what pushing the button actually does. — Michael
The lamp has two buttons. One button turns the lamp on and off, the other does nothing. The same mechanism is responsible for pushing both buttons. If it is possible to have pushed one of these buttons an infinite number of times then it is possible to have pushed the other button an infinite number of times. — Michael
If Thomson's lamp proves that it is impossible to have pushed the button that turns the lamp on and off an infinite number of times then it proves that it is impossible to have pushed the button that does nothing an infinite number of times. — Michael
And we can replace pushing a button with literally any other task and the same conclusion follows. Therefore, Thomson's lamp proves that all supertasks are impossible. — Michael
Therefore, Thomson's lamp proves that all supertasks are impossible. — Michael
But I've already discovered that Benacerraf and others have viewed this problem exactly as I do. So my position is valid, or you should take your objections up with them. The problem does not defined the lamp state at midnight and it can be anything you like. — fishfry
There is no tiny little interval before midnight where the sequence has ended, leaving the lamp in a particular state. — fishfry
As a side note, you’ve proven that reasoning with you about how infinity works is a supertask. — Fire Ologist
Not only is no answer to the second question deducible from the premises (unlike the answer to the first question), no answer consistent with the premises is possible. — Michael
And because lamps are either on or off at all times, but you can’t deduce the state from the premises, we don’t have a contradiction. — Fire Ologist
Not only is no state deducible from the premises, no state is consistent with the premises. — Michael
That doesn’t contradict the premises, because the premises never touch the lamp at two minutes. — Fire Ologist
P1. Between 22:00 and 01:00, nothing happens to the lamp except what is caused to happen to it by pushing the button — Michael
I think you mean between 22:00 and 23:00, assuming the two minute mark is 0:00. — Fire Ologist
Why do you need to redefine the premises? We are getting nowhere over and over again.
It’ time zero and two minutes later that are the limits. Two minutes later is a theoretical, because it is never actually reach by halving the prior interval starting at zero time, one minute time, one and half minutes time, one and three quarters, etc.
Precisely two minute lamp is outside the scenario. Period. Whatever state or non-state you assign or can’t assign to it, is not a function of the half timed lamp switching scenario. You are ducking the issue. — Fire Ologist
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