ducknumerouno
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- TL;DR
- Pi = 4?
I know it theoretically never touches the circle, but does the circle ever really become a circle?
This depends on the particular occasion. Infinities in calculus are replaced by the epsilontic and topological principles, infinities in number theory are based on induction, which in turn is based on Peano's axioms.ducknumerouno said:If infinity isn't a number and behaves differently from regular numbers, how can we really understand and use it in things like limits?
Yes, because we have methods to cope with these notations and do not really use "infinity".ducknumerouno said:Can we even trust that it is useable in math then?
You probably heard that there is a difference between countable many infinite numbers such as the integers, and uncountable many infinite numbers such as the real numbers. That makes a provable difference.ducknumerouno said:Because I heard somewhere that some infinityies are bigger than others ( I don't know where I heard that some scientist proved it)
As mentioned, it depends on the context. I cannot explain ##\infty ## without knowing that context.ducknumerouno said:I get that infinity is handled differently in different areas of math, but it still feels like we’re just ignoring how weird it is. Calling infinity a “shorthand” doesn’t really solve the problem—it just makes it easier to deal with, but doesn’t explain it fully.
So my edit to the previous post.ducknumerouno said:rue, infinity definitely depends on the context, but that just shows how confusing it can be to some people . If it can change meaning based on the situation, maybe it’s more of an issue than we know?
Well, to you, clearly, but not to most of us. Study some math and you'll get over it.ducknumerouno said:... that just shows how confusing it can be to some people
No. MANY words in the English language have different meanings depending on context. Does that make them philosophical things rather than real words?ducknumerouno said:But if infinity is always context-dependent and never truly defined, doesn’t that make it more of a philosophical idea than a mathematical thing?
I understand your point, but just because infinity is useful in math doesn’t mean it’s fully understood or without its philosophical issues. It’s a concept that helps explain things, but the fact that it’s treated as something both undefined and context-dependent makes it weird. Learning about it doesn’t erase the questions, understanding something means recognizing that it’s not as clear as it seems?phinds said:Look, @ducknumerouno, it should be clear to you from the responses in this thread that infinity is a mathematical concept that is quite useful. If you wish to view it as something else, feel free to do so, but do not expect the rest of the world to agree with you. Learn some math and you'll get over it.
You are complaining about something you don't understand. Instead of doing that, why not spend some time LEARNING about it.
You only believe it's not clear because you refuse to actually LEARN about instead of just complaining.ducknumerouno said:Learning about it doesn’t erase the questions, understanding something means recognizing that it’s not as clear as it seems?
Seriously ??? What do you think DOES provide understanding? Voodoo? Magic?ducknumerouno said:There is no problem with learning, it just provides little understanding
##2\cdot 2=4## and ##2\cdot 2 =1## are both true statements but, obviously, the twos represent something different in each statement.ducknumerouno said:I understand your point, but just because infinity is useful in math doesn’t mean it’s fully understood or without its philosophical issues. It’s a concept that helps explain things, but the fact that it’s treated as something both undefined and context-dependent makes it weird. Learning about it doesn’t erase the questions, understanding something means recognizing that it’s not as clear as it seems?
True.ducknumerouno said:Knowledge is a paradox. The more you learn, the more you realize how much you don't know.
It is true in the world of remainders by division by three. If we multiply two numbers, say ##5## and ##14## that both have the remainder ##2## then ##5\cdot 14=70## has the remainder ##2\cdot 2=1.##ducknumerouno said:How exactly is 2 * 2 equal to one a true statement,...
A deeper understanding starts with the insight that symbols mean different things in different contexts. There is no one and only infinity in mathematics. We use it as a symbol, and the context defines what it means. I could list quite a few, but that won't bring you closer to an understanding of infinity. It is precisely defined whenever we use it without having to refer to something infinite. That avoids the philosophical dimension in mathematics at the cost that we mean different things in different contexts if we use the symbol ##\infty. ##ducknumerouno said:... and learning can erase questions but you are not deeply understanding ...
I did not use a comparison; I only mentioned two (among even more) possibilities.ducknumerouno said:... instead of saying "light weigh between light that brigtens my eyes" which proves you learned at some point that there was a difference between the two proves that you are thinking very simply mindedly why not say, "I can distinguish the meanings of the word light from the other meaning with the same spelling" instead of directly comparing them? also you could be asking yourself what are the other meanings and how can I compare this better?
It should have shown that there is no single concept of infinity in mathematics. I even doubt that there is a single concept of infinity in philosophy. Hence, if you search for a deeper understanding, you have to either learn all the different uses and gain a deeper understanding in each case, or study philosophy.ducknumerouno said:I appreciate the comparison but I don't get how this can relate to understanding rather than knowing the concept of infinity?
Just because you can't operate on infinity with arithmetic as if it were a number does not mean you can't learn how we do work with it.ducknumerouno said:I don't get how this can relate to understanding rather than knowing the concept of infinity?
You have a sequence of shapes, ##S_n## say, which converge to some shape, ##S##. In this case ##S## is a circle.ducknumerouno said:TL;DR Summary: Pi = 4?
I know it theoretically never touches the circle, but does the circle ever really become a circle?
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