Ok, I see what you mean and I agree.Step (the verb) = the act of setting ones foot onto the next step (the noun; a thing).
The set of actions maps to the set of things.
The stairway consists of the set of steps, which we're stipulating as being infinite. Unlike the staircase, the acts of stepping don't exist (they are actions). — Relativist
He asked for a definition of continuous and discrete in plain English. Could you please provide the definition in plain language without referring him to read a Calculus book?He didn't ask for a definition of 'the continuum'. 'the continuum' is a noun. He asked for the distinction between 'continuous' and 'discrete'. 'continuous' and 'discrete' are adjectives.
'the continuum' has been defined at least three times already in this thread.
'continuous function' is the defined as usual in chapter 1 of any Calculus 1 textbook.
Other senses of 'continuous' depend on context. And definitions of 'discrete' depend on context. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I want to say that you could sweep all points of the continuum using that definition.We've been considering it at least fifty times already in this thread. What about it do you want to say? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Well, if space is continuous then it means an infinite number of steps exists yet we cannot complete them. The same applies to time in the example of the infinite staircase.I haven't seen a conceptual analysis that concludes it is discrete, but my impression is that it's typically assumed to be continuous. — Relativist
The laws of physics are deterministic but that does not mean that the chaotic behavior does not exist. It means that any error in the calculation of physical variables leads to a significant deviation from what we observe and what the calculation provides. The source of the error in the case of weather forecast is twofold: (1) The error in the estimate of physical variables in the initial point and (2) Using a discrete approach to solve a set of continuous equations.Is it your opinion, as a physicist, that chaotic systems are not (in principle) reducible to deterministic laws of physics? My impression is that the math related to chaotic systems is pertains to identifying functional patterns to make predictions. That, at least, seems to be the nature of weather forecasts - it's not that the movement of air molecules is fundamentally indeterminstic, rather it's that it's that the quantity of data that would be needed to identify the locations and trajectory of each molecule is orders of magnitude too large to be practical to compute. — Relativist
If by dense you mean that there exists a point between two arbitrary points then I understand that applies to the set of rational numbers. The link you provide is technical for me and I have to put more effort into understanding it.Correct meaning you understand that the rationals are dense but not continuous? — fishfry
By that, I mean that there exists a point between two arbitrary points in which the between is defined as the geometrical mean.Haven't we been doing that all along? Not sure what you mean. — fishfry
Ok, that definition seems good and simple for @tim wood. Thanks for providing the definition.The set of standard real numbers, as you yourself have defined it since the first post in this thread, when claiming it doesn't exist. I believe you've now come around to accepting that it does exist. So that's the mathematical continuum. The real numbers.
ps -- Technically, what I've described is a linear continuum.
Formally, a linear continuum is a linearly ordered set S of more than one element that is densely ordered, i.e., between any two distinct elements there is another (and hence infinitely many others), and complete, i.e., which "lacks gaps" in the sense that every nonempty subset with an upper bound has a least upper bound.
— Wikipedia — fishfry
Could you calculate the speed in all infinite steps?The speed of Achilles is 10meters/1second. The speed of Tortoise is 1meter/1000seconds. — TonesInDeepFreeze
He asked for a definition of continuous and discrete in plain English. Could you please provide the definition in plain language without referring him to read a Calculus book? — MoK
I want to say that you could sweep all points of the continuum using that definition. — MoK
Could you calculate the speed in all infinite steps? — MoK
How could you index an infinite set of steps? — MoK
I mean that there exists a point between two arbitrary points in which the between is defined as the geometrical mean. — MoK
Formally, a linear continuum is a linearly ordered set S of more than one element that is densely ordered, i.e., between any two distinct elements there is another (and hence infinitely many others), and complete, i.e., which "lacks gaps" in the sense that every nonempty subset with an upper bound has a least upper bound.
— Wikipedia
— fishfry
Ok, that definition seems good and simple for tim wood. Thanks for providing the definition. — MoK
I am not sure whether he was familiar with the concept of speed or not. But, the average speed in the interval can be calculated as where the is the length of th interval and is the time duration it takes the arrow to move th interval. So everything is clear for now. The problem is however with the index which cannot be infinite since it is a natural number yet we know that infinite steps exist.The arrow paradox says each is zero, as in time "points". Yet there is still the forward motion of the action, driven by energy — Gregory
Continuum is a continuous series. He understands what continuous is if he understands what continuum is.My point was that he didn't ask for a definition of 'the continuum'. The takeaway for you is to not conflate 'the continuum' with 'continuous'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Thanks. @fishery gave a definition for a continuum from wiki: "Formally, a linear continuum is a linearly ordered set S of more than one element that is densely ordered, i.e., between any two distinct elements there is another (and hence infinitely many others), and complete, i.e., which "lacks gaps" in the sense that every nonempty subset with an upper bound has a least upper bound."I didn't say that he needs to read a book. I said the definition is in chapter 1 of such books. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I can define the speed in th step as follows: where is the length of th interval and is the time duration it takes the runner (I am referring to Dichotomy paradox) to move th interval. The series however has infinite steps so I cannot define the speed in all infinite steps since is a natural number.I don't know. First you would need to define "speed in all infinite steps". — TonesInDeepFreeze
I mean you cannot give indexes to all members of an infinite series.What does that mean? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Thanks for the correction.(x+y)/2 is the arithmetical mean of {x y}, not the geometrical mean. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Please accept my apology. My, argument here was for Dichotomy paradox. You need to replace the arrow in that post with the runner, Atalanta.The arrow paradox is that the arrow does not move but that it moves.
/
Average speed is distance/time. In Zenos's paradox, both are finite. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I mean you cannot give indexes to all members of an infinite series. — MoK
If by dense you mean that there exists a point between two arbitrary points then I understand that applies to the set of rational numbers. The link you provide is technical for me and I have to put more effort into understanding it. — MoK
That is an infinite sequence. I am however interested in the sequence first mentioned by Zeno in Dichotomy Paradox in which the infinite member exists. Each member of the above sequence is finite, so you cannot use the above sequence to give indexes to all members of the sequence in Dichotomy Paradox since the infinite member exists.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...
Is that not an infinite sequence? — fishfry
Thanks for the correction.You mean sequence. A series is a sum. — fishfry
That is an infinite sequence. I am however interested in the sequence first mentioned by Zeno in Dichotomy Paradox in which the infinite member exists. Each member of the above sequence is finite, so you cannot use the above sequence to give indexes to all members of the sequence in Dichotomy Paradox since the infinite member exists. — MoK
Continuum is a continuous series — MoK
He understands what continuous is if he understands what continuum is. — MoK
you cannot give indexes to all members of an infinite series. — MoK
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...
Is that not an infinite sequence?
— fishfry
That is an infinite sequence. I am however interested in the sequence first mentioned by Zeno in Dichotomy Paradox in which the infinite member exists. Each member of the above sequence is finite, so you cannot use the above sequence to give indexes to all members of the sequence in Dichotomy Paradox since the infinite member exists. — MoK
My, argument here was for Dichotomy paradox. — MoK
Do you mind elaborating?Wrong. I explained the difference between them. Knowing the definition of 'the continuum' does not provide knowing the definition of 'continuous'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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