helene_t, on Mar 28 2006, 07:29 AM, said:
luke warm, on Mar 28 2006, 01:38 PM, said:
there is no part of the universe, visible or not, which can be shown to be infinite... and helene, the simplest math model isn't the one being discussed.. it even goes by the name 'complex math'
It's possible that nothing in nature can be "shown" to be infinite, because of the problems I mentioned. This assertion may be wrong (haven't thought about it too much), or it may depend on the exact meaning of the word "show".
by 'show' i mean to do more than assert... logic alone (and philosophy is, or should be, rooted in logic) can be used to prove the finite nature of the universe
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Personally, I would prefer an infinite universe, because:
- I like the geometry to be Euclidian
- I like the universe to be symmetric
- A symmetric, Euclidian space in infinite
well that's fine, we each have preferences... it just isn't what i was speaking of
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If you prefer a finite universe because you have other estetic criteria than symmetry, or because you have some data that can't be explain by Euclidian geometry (astronomers do have such data but I'm not an astromer so I don't care), then feel free to disagree with me. But that an infinite universe is impossible for purely philosofical reasons is simply not true.
it isn't that i prefer one to the other, it's that one (the infinite one) can't logically exist... i don't know what a 'purely' philosophical reason would be... i'm just saying that the universe, and all it contains, must be finite... and i don't say this on philosophical grounds, but on logical grounds... do a google for 'hilbert's paradox' to get a glimpse of what i'm talking about
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Consider these two models:
1) Some model for a finite universe
ok, i'll use the model in which we live
... the one where time itself can't be infinite
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2) Model 1) embedeed into an infinite space with some force that prevents vissible stuff from penetrating the boundaries of 1).
The two models correspond to identical observations. If 1) agrees with observations, it's just a matter of preference.
ok... can i call model 2) "eternity?" and can i say that model 2) is God's residence, and can i say that model 1) is his creation? because if i can, i do
Sigi said:
Let's say that time is discrete (that is, reality happens in tiny steps, each following another), maybe this has been even proved by now, I don't know. Then what's the problem in making the timeline infinitely long? You will still be able to get from then to now by counting up a googol of time quanta.
no, you can't get to now from then... that's the problem with any model that postulates an infinite universe... because between each googol of time quanta you quantify lies another infinite googol of time quanta, etc, etc, etc (ad, pardon me, infinitum)
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If one accepts that time is a law of nature that simply happens (like gravity simply exists), where is the problem with assuming that it is a continuous phenomenon?
i'm not sure time is a law of nature... that aside, saying that something is a continuous phenomenon is not the same thing as saying it is infinite... there are logical problems with an infinite time line... i can't say whether the same is true for a continuous time line
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I fully acknowledge that "yesterday" happened, but "yesterday" does not exist. "Now" exists, nothing else.
the very fact that you can point to yesterday proves not only that it existed, but that you have arrived at today, such arrival of necessity showing the finite nature of the path traveled... how many increments of time must have been traversed to arrive today from yesterday? now if each increment (or point) was an infinite number of such points, can you see how today would not have arrived? the very fact that we are here, now, shows the finiteness of the increments
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BTW: feel free to move this to another thread if you want to continue the discussion, I certainly do.
me too, i find it interesting... i don't know how to move these posts though, except to copy each in a new thread ... if that's the only way, i'll try to do it later
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)