Blargus said:
Oh so now it's the "vast majority" not everyone who studies math and all mathematicians?
I'm excluding cranks such as the one you brought to the table, namely Claes Johnson. I don't include another you cited, John D. Norton, who is not a mathematician.
Blargus said:
Doesn't seem like you're seeing the issue clearly. My understanding is that you seem to think like the math prof in the video about the diagonal proof that "you will eventually get to every number."
I think that you are the one who is not seeing the issue at all. You question the method of enumerating rational numbers but admit that you don't understand how it was explained.
Blargus said:
"The snake" is an interesting way of ordering rational numbers I guess not that I totally get it seems like you can't order them at all as a total group.
The above confirms to me that you don't understand what you saw in the video. The scheme you describe as a "snake" does not order the rational numbers; it merely lists them.
I challenge you: please tell me one rational number that won't be enumerated in this enumeration method.
Blargus said:
IMO this is a flagrantly wrong view of the infinite and if it is accepted by Cantor as it seems he does in statements it is wrong and he is misleading everyone "the vast majority."
It takes a very high level of self esteem to argue that a particular point is wrong when you have no understanding of the explanation you're disputing.
Blargus said:
Seems to me that just because you can seemingly order them on a number line in between integers doesn't mean there's more, because both go on forever.
Here's another thing you didn't understand. No one is ordering anything on the number line between integers.
Blargus said:
Decimal representations that never terminate or repeat have a "complete" form as decimals? Are you saying pi in decimal form can be totally expressed by any method? Not potentially expressed to any desired length, totally expressed to the last decimal? Just NO for the last time by definition it cannot. It seems horrifying that this is apparently being argued against.
You apparently misunderstood what I said, which was
NOT that pi, ##\sqrt 2##, and other irrational numbers have terminating decimal expansions.
Blargus said:
It's a philosophical point that is there in calculus limits which protects it and if math has divorced itself from this point it is going the wrong way.
I'm not sure you understand calculus limits, either, despite your claim of having taken a calculus class way back when.
Blargus said:
Apparently applied mathematics took the fork in the road and avoided Cantor's paradise and became the mathematics that made computers. But someone doesn't want you to read that.
Apples and oranges. As I said before, computers deal with numbers that can be represented using a relatively small number of digits. The IEEE 754 standard for floating point arithmetic that is universally used in computing touches on the concept of infinity, but only as a number that is either larger than any positive number that can be represented, or smaller than any negative number that can be represented.
Blargus said:
I'm gonna make everyone's day. Did you ever build a "Bedini SG?" Or did you watch the Myth Busters and hem and haw about how it's "proven wrong" and the fools that believe it and not analyze their attempt or see what the "free energy crazies" said about it? You're welcome I said the F.E word I await my fate.
"Free energy" is one of several topics explicitly no allowed here at Physics Forums. See what happens if you bring it up again.
Blargus said:
Sorry I'm skeptical what did Cantor's concept of infinity saying apparently we can count an uncountable set do for math's practicality? I mean really. I can't talk about his math fine probably never will but just this concept?
This has nothing to do with practicality, but so what? There are a lot of topics in advanced mathematics that have no connection with the practical. On the other hand, the algebra developed by George Boole was considered to have no practical application at the time. But with the advent of digital computers, suddenly Boolean Algebra had a great many applications. Another area, vector spaces, must have seemed to be impractical at the time, but have since found applications in cryptography and error-correcting algorithms for CDs and DVDs.
Blargus said:
No, I'm saying it seems to me philosophically Cantor wrongly redefined the concept of infinity and I believe it differs from what I have had some distant experience in with calculus ...
Well, that's a problem, trying to use philosophy to understand or dispute mathematics. Logic would be a better tool to use, together with some basic understanding of what was being discussed.And unless I miss my guess, the "distant experience" was a long time ago.
Blargus said:
And his redefinition seems flatly wrong,
Cantor did not redefine infinity; his work
extended the idea of infinity to include different levels of infinitude.
Blargus said:
denegrates the use value of it
??? - no idea of what you're trying to say.
Blargus said:
and looks like it leads math on a mad journey unmoroored from reason where "the probability of choosing a member of an infinite set is zero"
As I said before, what you're calling a "mad journey" was explained very carefully much earlier in this thread.
Blargus said:
"some infinite quantities can be measured"
There was no mention of measuring infinite quantities. The discussion was about enumerating and comparing different infinite sets.
Blargus said:
as the math prof in the video said "eventually we'll get to every one of the numbers in this infinite set."
Again, I challenge you to tell me a single number that he won't get to. In my reply I'll tell you where that number is and how many steps it takes to get to it.
Since this thread has degenerated into much nonsense by a new member, I'm closing it.
@Blargus, if you want to reply to my challenge, you can do so my sending me a PM.