Renfield said:
You are wrong, actually. You can talk about the velocity of an object at a precise instant. It doesn't matter that the limit never actually reaches zero. It becomes so small that it is negligable, and drops out of the equation. Any term that is a constant multiplied by this limit also will drop out.
Um, no, you can't. Not in a physical system.
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle deals with uncertainty in measurement; any physical measurement you take of position will of necessity be an estimate of the "true" position, plus an error term. Similarly, any measurement of time that you take will inevitably be an estimate of time. Since the error term is not[\i] related to your limits, the errors will inevitably dominate your calculations, and you'll basically be taking the limit as estimated time goes to zero of a random error function. Hardly "negligible."
This is old stuff and applies even in a Newtonian universe -- with machines with finite precision, you cannot achieve infinitely accurate results. Heisenberg's accomplishment was to show that, under the assumptions of quantum mechanics, there is a limit beyond which the measurement precision cannot go due to the way in which the observed and the observer interact in the process of measuring.