Originally posted by Hessam
Some of my classmates were mentioning today that there are "different" values for infinity, like there is more than one infinity... can someone please help me? explain exactly what that means and what these values are please
I suspect they're talking about the
cardinal numbers developed by Cantor. Basically, one value of infinity is the "countable infinity" that is, the number of positive integers. As the previous poster mentioned, that's also the same as the number of even positive integers, even though it might seem there should be twice as many positive integers as even positive integers. Surprisingly, it's also the number of rational numbers, positive and negative. These are all countable infinities.
But when you get to
all the numbers, including the irrationals, then you have a set where you cannot simply count all it's elements. It's also a line, as in the number line. These are different degrees of infinity. That is to say, there is no way to put all of the numbers on a line into a one to one corrospondence with the integers. Again, perhaps surprisingly, the number of points on a short line segment is the same as the number of points on a long line segment, or even an infinitely long ray, and also all the points on a plane, or in a 3-D space, or even in an n-D space, as long as n is finite.
The
cardinal numbers are denoted by the firstHebrew letter, aleph. The countable infinity is also called aleph sub zero, while the infinity of the continuum, the number of points on the line, is called aleph sub one.
What might aleph sub two be? It would be the set of all possible curves through space, or the set of all the permutations by which the points on a line could be folded or jumbled up. That would also be all of the possible histories of all the possible universes that might be (or even just of our one that is, since they'd all have the same infinite size). (Disclaimer for physicists: I'm discounting quantizing effects and assumming the universe is infinite and unbounded).
There are in fact an infinite number of such infinities, though I've never heard of an analogy for what aleph sub three might be. Cantor might have had a notion of it, but surely he was insane by then. I try not to think about it; it hurts my head too much.
It can be shown that adding infinities doesn't change their order, and neither does multiplying them. To go from one infinity to another you have to raise two (or larger) to the prior infinity, and that will take you to the next. It's all tied into set theory, which shows that the number of subsets of a set of n elements is 2^n. The number or subsets of an infinite set is a higher order of infinity than the original set.
At the turn of the last century (1900 thereabouts) there was a huge debate about whether there could be infinities in between other infinities. That is, is there a distinct infinity between the countable infinity and the infinity of the continuum? As it turns out, the answer is yes or no. Or maybe that should read "yes
and no."
Rather than go into that, I'd recommend the excellent book
Mathematics: The Loss of Certainty by Morris Kline. It's well worth the effort of a careful reading.