sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
That's certainly what the simplistic division of a volume by a length would imply. It's an area, measured in square metres.
Actually no. It's measured in square meters times meter/kilometer, or 10^{-3} m^2.
But in the real world, that is precisely what it is not.
So think of it as volume/length. What was the question again?
Here's a simple one for someone to explain.
In the expression "There exists an infinite number of real numbers between the integers one and two";
a)What is the exact meaning of the preposition "between" in this context?
b)Does the word "number" in the phrase "infinite number" mean the same thing as the word "number" in the phrase "real numbers"?
c)How many letters are there between a and b?
d)Is "infinite" a number or an adjective?
a) Either strictly greater than and strictly less than, or including 1 and 2, or one but not the other. The statement is true in all those cases.
b) Strictly speaking... no. Infinity is not a real number. But one can extend the reals to include infinity in various ways, and the statement would still be true. Or you could phrase it as "the number of real numbers between 1 and 2 is larger than any real number".
c) Zero, in the most obvious interpretation of "between". But as I said you could take the answer to be 0, 1, or 2 and it wouldn't affect a).
d) See b. It's not an adjective - for example one could rephrase it more precisely by saying what number (not a real number, a more general one) of real numbers there are in that interval. The answer is the cardinality of the reals, which is sometimes called c (usually written in some weird gothic font to make it look scary). c is not a real number - it's an infinite number.