jt512
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2011
- Messages
- 5,104
No it isn't. Infinity's not an actual number. Can you divide four by red?
How can it be zero by definition?
Um, because it is defined to be.
No it isn't. Infinity's not an actual number. Can you divide four by red?
How can it be zero by definition?
I have a nice Belgian Tripel waiting for me in the fridge, but that is my particular beer. Would you settle for a copy of the beer?
Back in my number theory days (many decades ago), I got my hand slapped for making a similar analogy and using the word "smaller". It was "imprecise". You can map the primes onto the integers 1:1. Yes, there are integers that are not primes, but IIRC they are considered the same "class" of infinity because of the mapping. For the record, I still think of it the same way as you describe.
None of the above should be construed as exempting Jabba from his need to read the thread, pay attention to his critics, and stop manufacturing "agreement" out of whole cloth.
CT
Um, because it is defined to be.
I have a nice Belgian Tripel waiting for me in the fridge, but that is my particular beer. Would you settle for a copy of the beer?
I saw what you did there.
Even if the chance of one's existence is very, very small in the scientific model, in order to compare it to any other explanation we would need evidence that this explanation is at least possible. There is no evidence immateriality is possible.
Also, even if H is the scientific model of the universe, ~H isn't immortality. It's just anything other than H. There's no way to figure out the chance that immortality is the most likely ~H.
Last, the clockwork universe has to be included in either H or ~H. If we like in a universe that was predetermined by its starting conditions, the chance of any person who exists actually doing so is 1. On the H side of the equation, that makes the chance of one's existence at best unknowable. On the ~H side, it makes the distinction between either immortality or determinism unknowable.
I just mention these things because we've gone a while without stating them. I don't want Jabba to think he might crack things by getting anyone to admit that the chance of existing under H is really, really small.
...evidence that this explanation is at least possible. There is no evidence immateriality is possible.
~H isn't immortality. It's just anything other than H.
I just mention these things because we've gone a while without stating them.
I just had a very tender notion run through my head about infinities of beer.
On the up side, you have an infinite amount of potential beers in your fridge. Also an infinite amount of potential bears.Sadly I need to go shopping. All the beer in my fridge right now is only potential beer. And looking at the traffic report, there's no chance I'll be going home at 60 mph.
[...] If we let our guard down for a second Jabba might listen to us.
I'm going to post my secret award-winning chili recipe to see whether Jabba is actually reading and intentionally ignoring what I say.
On the up side, you have an infinite amount of potential beers in your fridge. Also an infinite amount of potential bears.
I would say that beer is more target-meaningful than a bear.
I would say that beer is more target-meaningful than a bear.
Yes. Which means that division by infinity makes no sense, so we had to define the answer.
Infinity is a concept. It is not a specific number; there are different sets of infinity.
Example: The set of all prime numbers, which is part of and smaller than the set of all integers.
Are you certain the bear is not a dog? Or a coffee table?
We are not talking about infinite sets. We are talking about the symbol `+∞`, which is defined in advanced calculus to be the upper bound of the real numbers.
Is that indeed what we are talking about? Jabba hasn't made appeals to advanced calculus in support of immortality that I can recall.