Xamonas Chegwé wrote:jamest wrote:GrahamH wrote:jamest wrote:Defining the series all the way to infinity would involve explicitly stating the totality of those terms. I am contending that it is debatable whether such a thing can be done - you cannot simply assert that it can be done as a basis for further mathematical work.
There is no need to specify the totality of those terms unless you want to add them up.
If you want to equate A with itself, then you have to show that A can be precisely defined. If A cannot be precisely defined, then it makes no sense to say that A = A. It is meaningless.
This is a very naïve statement. Equality is axiomatic. By its very definition
any expression is equal to itself - that is, equality possesses the reflexive property.
This is
the point of contention. Asserting your belief isn't very helpful, especially when you haven't addressed any of the reasons I have presented to counter that view. Oh not it isn't... oh yes it is - such debates are pointless. I'm trying very-hard to provide reasons to challenge the assumption that you have utilised, so I would appreciate more than a roll of the eyes as a response.
Ultimately, we must all acknowledge that there is a difference between a finite 'entity' and an infinite entity. Therefore, we must think twice before assuming that the obvious axioms which we apply to finite entities, necessarily apply to infinite entities - especially in a discussion such as this, which seeks to justify
the reality of infinite 'entities'. It seems that I have to reiterate, yet again, that this is supposed to be a rational discussion about your justification for the utilisation of
that initial axiom, as the basis for your subsequent math... and that
this is now, in no sense, a mathematical discussion. You simply cannot prove/justify,
mathematically, that A = A for all entities, including infinite ones. If you could, A = A wouldn't be the BASIS for your argument.
You're just asserting that which you
need to be true, in order to make your subsequent conclusion.
The very point that this a rational issue should alert you to the dubiousness of your claim, which means that you should be trying to justify it, rather than just parroting it.
I put it to you that there can be no equivalence of anything that
itself has no definite form. What is the equivalence of incompleteness? 'A' can only be mirrored in its [finite] completeness... otherwise, it has no mirror-image.
What is '1'?
It's a complete and definite concept. So how can something that is forever incomplete ever be completed? How can an UNENDING and therefore incomplete entity, ever be completed? It simply does not compute to say that it can... and your mathematical conclusion DOES complete an unending series. That's why it makes no sense... and that's why the conclusion is at-odds with this understanding. Indeed, this understanding alone such alert you to the fact that a mistake must have been made, in coming to that conclusion.
Please don't conflate an infinite entity with an eternally-expanding finite-entity, since an eternally-expanding finite entity is
always a finite entity, no matter the potential for its extensiveness. The point of this discussion, is to seek an understanding of
the reality of infinite 'entities' as distinct to finite entities. It is not to seek an understanding of the the distinction between a finite entity and a finite entity that never stops expanding in size.
I put it to you that A = A, is correct
just for finite entities - even for those that forever expand in definite/finite form. But if 'A' is defined, ultimately, as
that which is
not finite, then we have a problem. That is, infinite entities are
never completely defined, and, therefore, cannot expand. For, how can something that is without complete/finite definition, grow beyond what it is?
I contend that the utilisation of your initial axiom was a confused consequence of conflating expanding finiteness with 'infiniteness' - of applying the same intuitive knowledge we have of finiteness, with infiniteness. And I contend that you have no reason to justify this conflation of concepts.
Xamonas Chegwé wrote:The phone number of the next person to call you = The phone number of the next person to call you
This is irrelevant and irrational, as the number of the next person to call me will have to be finite, if I ever hope to call him back. Even in eternity. Indeed, if the phone number of the person that calls me is infinite, then it is illogical that I should ever receive a phone call... since that implies that he pressed a
final digit!
is a valid equality even if you miss the call and don't know it was made, or if even you have no telephone!
If I have no telephone, I receive no telephone call.