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Logic & First Principles, 17: Pondering the Hyperreals *R with Prof Carol Wood (including Infinitesimals)

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Dr Carol Wood of Wesleyan University (a student of Abraham Robinson who pioneered non-standard analysis 50+ years ago) has discussed the hyperreals in two Numberphile videos:

First:

Extended:

Wenmackers may also be helpful:

In effect, using Model Theory (thus a fair amount of protective hedging!) or other approaches, one may propose an “extension” of the Naturals and the Reals, often N* or R* — but we will use *N and *R as that is more conveniently “hyper-“.

Such a new logic model world — the hyperreals — gives us a way to handle transfinites in a way that is intimately connected to the Reals (with Naturals as regular “mileposts”). As one effect, we here circumvent the question, are there infinitely many naturals, all of which are finite by extending the zone. So now, which version of the counting numbers are we “really” speaking of, N or *N? In the latter, we may freely discuss a K that exceeds any particular k in N reached stepwise from 0. That is, some k = 1 + 1 + . . . 1, k times added and is followed by k+1 etc.

And BTW, the question of what a countable infinite means thus surfaces: beyond any finite bound. That is, for any finite k we represent in N, no matter how large, we may succeed it, k+1, k+2 etc, and in effect we may shift a tape starting 0,1,2 etc up to k, k+1, k+2 etc and see that the two “tapes” continue without end in 1:1 correspondence:

Extending, in a quasi-Peano universe, we can identify some K > any n in N approached by stepwise progression from 0. Where of course Q and R are interwoven with N, giving us the familiar reals as a continuum. What we will do is summarise how we may extend the idea of a continuum in interesting and useful ways — especially once we get to infinitesimals.

Clipping from the videos:

Pausing, let us refresh our memory on the structure and meaning of N considered as ordinals, courtesy the von Neumann construction:

  • {} –> 0
  • {0} –> 1
  • {0,1} –> 2
  • . . .
  • {0,1,2 . . . } –> w, omega the first transfinite ordinal

Popping over to the surreals for a moment, we may see how to build a whole interconnected world of numbers great and small (and yes the hyperreals fit in there . . . from Ehrlich, as Wiki summarises: “[i]t has also been shown (in Von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel set theory) that the maximal class hyperreal field is isomorphic to the maximal class surreal field”):

Now, we may also see in the extended R, *R, that 1/K = m, a newly minted number closer to zero than we can get by inverting any k in N or r in R, that is m is less than 1/k for any k in N and is less than 1/r for any r in R (as the reals are interwoven with the naturals):

and that as we have a range around K, K+1 etc and K-1 etc, even K/2 (an integer if K is even) m has company, forming an ultra-near cloud of similar infinitesimals in the extra-near neighbourhood of 0.

Of course, the reciprocal function is here serving as a catapult, capable of leaping over the bulk of the reals in *R, back and forth between transfinite hyperreals such as K and kin and infinitesimals such as m and kin, ultra-near to 0.

Using the additive inverse approach, this extends to the negative side also.

Further, by extending addition, 0 plus its cloud (often called a Monad — we can represent *0*) can be added to any r in R or indeed K in *R, i.e. we may vector-shift the cloud near 0 anywhere in *R. That is, every number on the extended line has its own ultra-near cloud. We note, reals are vectors with +/- directionality and a magnitude |r|.

Where does all of this lead? First, to Calculus foundations, then to implications of a transfinite zone with stepwise succession, among other things; besides, we need concept space to think and reason about matters of relevance to ID, however remotely (or not so remotely). So, let me now clip a comment I made in the ongoing calculus notation thread of discussion:

KF, 86: >>Money shot comment by JB:

JB, 74: we have Arbogast’s D() notation that we could use, but we don’t. Why not? Because we want people to look at this like a fraction. If we didn’t, there are a ton of other ways to write the derivative. That we do it as a fraction is hugely suggestive, especially, as I mentioned, there exists a correct way to write it as a fraction.

This is pivotal: WHY do we want that ratio, that fraction?
WHY do we think in terms of a function y = f(x), which is continuous and “smooth” in a relevant domain, then for some h that somehow trends to 0 but never quite gets there — we cannot divide by zero — then evaluate:

dy/dx is
lim h –> 0
of
[f(x + h) – f(x)]/[(x + h) – x]

. . . save that, we are looking at the tangent value for the angle the tangent-line of the f(x) curve makes with the horizontal, taken as itself a function of x, f'(x) in Newton’s fluxion notation.

We may then consider f-prime, f'(x) as itself a function and seek its tangent-angle behaviour, getting to f”(x), the second order flow function. Then onwards.

But in all of this, we are spewing forth a veritable spate of infinitesimals and higher order infinitesimals, thus we need something that allows us to responsibly and reliably conceive of and handle them.

I suspect, the epsilon delta limits concept is more of a kludge work-around than we like to admit, a scaffolding that keeps us on safe grounds among the reals. After all, isn’t there no one closest real to any given real, i.e. there is a continuum

But then, is that not in turn something that implies infinitesimal, all but zero differences? Thus, numbers that are all but zero different from zero itself considered as a real? Or, should we be going all vector and considering a ring of the close in C?

In that context, I can see that it makes sense to consider some K that somehow “continues on” from the finite specific reals we can represent, let’s use lower case k, and confine ourselves to the counting numbers as mileposts on the line:

0 – 1 – 2 . . . k – k+1 – k+2 – . . . . – K – K+1 – K+2 . . .
{I used the four dot ellipsis to indicate specifically transfinite span}

We may then postulate a catapult function so 1/K –> m, where m is closer to 0 than ANY finite real or natural we can represent by any k can give.
Notice, K is preceded by a dash, meaning there is a continuum back to say K/2 (–> considering K as even) and beyond, descending and passing mileposts as we go:

K-> K-1 –> K-2 . . . K/2 – [K/2 – 1] etc,

but we cannot in finite successive steps bridge down to k thence to 1 and 0.

Where, of course, we can reflect in the 0 point, through posing additive inverses and we may do the rotation i*[k] to get the complex span.

Of course, all of this is to be hedged about with the usual non standard restrictions, but here is a rough first pass look at the hyperreals, with catapult between the transfinite and the infinitesimals that are all but zero. Where the latter clearly have a hierarchy such that m^2 is far closer to 0 than m.

And, this is also very close to the surreals pincer game, where after w steps we can constrict a continuum through in effect implying that a real is a power series sum that converges to a particular value, pi or e etc. then, go beyond, we are already in the domain of supertasks so just continue the logic to the transfinitely large domain, ending up with that grand class.

Coming back, DS we are here revisiting issues of three years past was it: step along mile posts back to the singularity as the zeroth stage, then beyond as conceived as a quasi-physical temporal causal domain with prior stages giving rise to successors. We may succeed in finite steps from any finitely remote -k to -1 to 0 and to some now n, but we have no warrant for descent from some [transefinite] hyperreal remote past stage – K as the descent in finite steps, unit steps, from there will never span to -k. That is, there is no warrant for a proposed transfinite quasi-physical, causal-temporal successive past of our observed cosmos and its causal antecedents.

Going back to the focus, if 0 is surrounded by an infinitesimal cloud closer than any k in R can give by taking 1/k, but which we may attain to by taking 1/K in *R, the hyperreals, then by simple vector transfer along the line, any real, r, will be similarly surrounded by such a cloud. For, (r + m) is in the extended continuum, but is closer than any (r + 1/k) can give where k is in R.

The concept, continuum is strange indeed, stranger than we can conceive of.

So, now, we may come back up to ponder the derivative.

If a valid, all but zero number or quantity exists, then — I am here exploring the logic of structure and quantity, I am not decreeing some imagined absolute conclusion as though I were omniscient and free of possibility of error — we may conceive of taking a ratio of two such quantities, called dy and dx, where this further implies an operation of approach to zero increment. The ratio dy/dx then is much as conceived and h = [(x +h) – x] is numerically dx.

But dx is at the same time a matter of an operation of difference as difference trends to zero, so it is not conceptually identical

Going to the numerator, with f(x), the difference dy is again an operation but is constrained by being bound to x, we must take the increment h in x to identify the increment in f(x), i.e. the functional relationship is thus bound into the expression. This is not a free procedure.

Going to a yet higher operation, we have now identified that a flow-function f ‘(x) is bound to the function f(x) and to x, all playing continuum games as we move in and out by some infinitesimal order increment h as h trends to zero. Obviously, f ‘(x) and f ”(x) can and do take definite values as f(x) also does, when x varies. So, we see operations as one aspect and we see functions as another, all bound together.

And of course the D-notation as extended also allows us to remember that operations accept pre-image functions and yield image functions. Down that road lies a different perspective on arithmetical, algebraic, analytical and many other operations including of course the vector-differential operations and energy-potential operations [Hamiltonian] that are so powerful in electromagnetism, fluid dynamics, q-mech etc.

Coming back, JB seems to be suggesting, that under x, y and other quasi-spatial variables lies another, tied to the temporal-causal domain, time. Classically, viewed as flowing somehow uniformly at a steady rate accessible all at once everywhere. dt/dt = 1 by definition. From this, we may conceive of a state space trajectory for some entity of interest p, p(x,y,z . . . t). At any given locus in the domain, we have a state and as t varies there is a trajectory. x and y etc are now dependent.

This brings out the force of JB’s onward remark to H:

if x *is* the independent variable, and there is no possibility of x being dependent on something else, then d^2x (i.e., d(d(x))) IS zero

Our simple picture breaks if x is no longer lord of all it surveys.

Ooooopsie . . .

Trouble.

As, going further, we now must reckon with spacetime and with warped spacetime due to presence of massive objects, indeed up to outright tearing the fabric at the event horizon of a black hole. Spacetime is complicated.

A space variable is now locked into a cluster of very hairy issues, with a classical limiting case. >>

The world just got a lot more complicated than hitherto we may have thought. END

F/N: I add (Apr 15) a link (HT: Wiki) on Faa di Bruno’s formula for the nth order derivative of a function of a function, which extends the well-known chain rule:

HT: Wikipedia

Hat tip MathWorld, here are the first few results:

NB, this is referenced by JB in his discussion.

PS: As one implication, let us go to Davies and Walker:

In physics, particularly in statistical mechanics, we base many of our calculations on the assumption of metric transitivity, which asserts that a system’s trajectory will eventually [–> given “enough time and search resources”] explore the entirety of its state space – thus everything that is phys-ically possible will eventually happen. It should then be trivially true that one could choose an arbitrary “final state” (e.g., a living organism) and “explain” it by evolving the system backwards in time choosing an appropriate state at some ’start’ time t_0 (fine-tuning the initial state). In the case of a chaotic system the initial state must be specified to arbitrarily high precision. But this account amounts to no more than saying that the world is as it is because it was as it was, and our current narrative therefore scarcely constitutes an explanation in the true scientific sense. We are left in a bit of a conundrum with respect to the problem of specifying the initial conditions necessary to explain our world. A key point is that if we require specialness in our initial state (such that we observe the current state of the world and not any other state) metric transitivity cannot hold true, as it blurs any dependency on initial conditions – that is, it makes little sense for us to single out any particular state as special by calling it the ’initial’ state. If we instead relax the assumption of metric transitivity (which seems more realistic for many real world physical systems – including life), then our phase space will consist of isolated pocket regions and it is not necessarily possible to get to any other physically possible state (see e.g. Fig. 1 for a cellular automata example).

[–> or, there may not be “enough” time and/or resources for the relevant exploration, i.e. we see the 500 – 1,000 bit complexity threshold at work vs 10^57 – 10^80 atoms with fast rxn rates at about 10^-13 to 10^-15 s leading to inability to explore more than a vanishingly small fraction on the gamut of Sol system or observed cosmos . . . the only actually, credibly observed cosmos]

Thus the initial state must be tuned to be in the region of phase space in which we find ourselves [–> notice, fine tuning], and there are regions of the configuration space our physical universe would be excluded from accessing, even if those states may be equally consistent and permissible under the microscopic laws of physics (starting from a different initial state). Thus according to the standard picture, we require special initial conditions to explain the complexity of the world, but also have a sense that we should not be on a particularly special trajectory to get here (or anywhere else) as it would be a sign of fine–tuning of the initial conditions. [ –> notice, the “loading”] Stated most simply, a potential problem with the way we currently formulate physics is that you can’t necessarily get everywhere from anywhere (see Walker [31] for discussion).

[“The “Hard Problem” of Life,” June 23, 2016, a discussion by Sara Imari Walker and Paul C.W. Davies at Arxiv.]

Yes, cosmological fine-tuning lurks under these considerations, given where statistical mechanics points.

F/N: J P Moreland comments:

U/D April, 2022: As this topic was brought back up three years later, I add as follows:

KF, 221: >> . . .

I think some basics of structure and quantity need to be made explicitly clear. So, I note as below.

First, von Neumann’s construction:

{} –> 0
{0} –> 1
{0,1} –> 2

. . . [ellipsis]

{0,1,2 . . . } –> w

That is w [omega] is the order type of the naturals constructed as ordinals, and N has cardinality, aleph-null.

Now, let us do a comma separated value construction of a wx3 matrix, pardon limitations of Word Press:

{0: , 0 –>1 , 1 –> -1
1: , 2 –> 2 , 3 –> -2
2: , 4 –> 4, 5 –> -3
. . . , . . . , . . .
w: , w , w’}

Where clearly w + w’ = 0, as can be seen by decimation of the rows.

We here see next, that the naturals, the integers, the evens and the odds as well as the negatives all have order type w. Where, a basic definition of a transfinite set is that a proper subset can be placed in 1:1 correspondence with the whole. Thus, [by demonstration] the integers and particularly the negative integers can be seen to be transfinite, with the counting numbers as a metric. [Order type is w.]

Therefore, to claim that past finite stages of time that cumulate to now are without beginning, thus can be mapped to the set of the negative integers exhaustively, is to imply that the traverse from the remote pass to now is transfinite. Implicitly, transfinite.

That such a span cannot be traversed in cumulative, finite stage steps should be obvious and should be acknowledged. However, given the open or veiled acerbity that has generated a toxic climate surrounding origins in general and UD in particular, let us note for the simple case of counting onward from some k and its complement k’, again using a matrix:

0: , k+0 , k’-0
1: , k+1 , k’-1
2: , k+2 , k’-2
. . . , . . . , . . .
w: , k+w , k’ – w}

That is, counting on beyond any k we state or represent in N, with k’ in Z-, will continue transfinitely of order type w, just as for the col 1 case k = 0. This of course reflects the same transfiniteness. It also means that at any finite stage k, or k’ we may go on from there as though we had just begun.

A labour of Sisyphus.

This is how the futile supertask I have often spoken of arises.

And if counting in Z- L-ward, counting down is transfinite, the same members will be just as transfinite were we to start somehow from L-ward and try to proceed in R-ward steps to 0 and beyond. [Or even to some finite k’.]

We may therefore freely conclude that past time cannot have been transfinite, regardless of side debates as to how the difference between any two specific integers in Z we identify, state or represent, z1 and z2, will be finite as the two can be bounded by finite onward values. That is, the ellipsis is part of the structure of such sets and in part tells us that we can only execute stepwise a potential but not complete transfinite, and we use the ellipses to represent the actual main body of work, where the transfinite lives.

So, again, using hyperreals only emphasises and makes this plainer for someone first seeing such a strange domain.

We are only warranted to speak of a finitely remote past that has succeeded itself by finite stages to now. In principle, we may succeed onward in a potential infinity but at no particular stage will we exhaust such.>>

Comments
OK, to be clear, if we think of the numbers as progressing from left to right, so each integer is the successor k + 1 to the previous integer k, do the integers have a beginning? I think we have all been taking the left to right progression for granted. If you want to think of the negative numbers as progressing to the left from zero, then the question becomes is there any "last moment" as you recede into the past - the point in the past that is farthest from zero." Is there such a "last moment" that is the farthest in the past?hazel
April 20, 2019
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KF,
DS, the same effective problem obtains for move over one room to get in one fresh guest. The same point obtains of full vs by rearranging mass, suddenly room appears. KF
What exactly is the problem? I don't see anything contradictory with this scenario. I'm assuming that all guests leave their rooms simultaneously (according to their synchronized clocks), shift down one room, then immediately reenter, thus avoiding the issue Snoke talks about.daveS
April 20, 2019
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H, ET is right, you can extend numbers from zero in both directions, but this is not quite the same as descent in actual stages of time to now through cumulative causal succession. Yes, looked at ellipse in, Z- never begins: { . . . -2, -1, 0} but that's the point. To get to -2 temporally [considering the past stages as labelled with numbers for convenience] you have to descend down the full beginningless span of that ellipse. Where for every stage Q finitely removed from -2, {. . . Q, . . . -2, -1, 0} you have had to descend to Q-2, Q-1, i,e, the chain replicates L-wards beyond Q in direct copy of to 0, i.e. the span is demonstrably infinite L-wards. And EVERY Q takes in the claim that the whole chain L-wards comprises finite values so that Q is bound by Q-1 for every Q in Z-. The chain is indeed beginningless L-wards in the sense of infinite. By trying to avoid descent from an acknowledged transfinite -K, which will never reach to Q due to the obvious supertask, the infeasible supertask does not go away, it is only harder to see. KF PS: This answers your tell me Y/N. With the implication that a claimed infinite past within Z- does not in fact evade the supertask. There is no warrant for claiming a transfinite task, we are only warranted to speak of a finite span from values Q that can descend in steps to 0 without trying to do a supertask. Abstract numbers do not face the constraint of successive, stepwise cumulative descent that time faces. And we are still not addressing heat death or provision of actually infinite heat reservoirs and heat sinks. The last actually brings in the problems of an actual physical infinity.kairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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kf, do the negative integers have a beginning? Just yes or no.hazel
April 20, 2019
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H, First, try here for a start:
A response to a Platonistic and to a set-theoretic objection to the Kalam cosmological argument J. P. MORELAND Talbot School of Theology, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, La Mirada, CA 90639 Abstract: The ?rst premise of the Kalam cosmological argument has come under ?re in the last few years. The premise states that the universe had a beginning, and one of two prominent arguments for it turns on the claim that an actual in?nite collection of entities cannot exist. After stating the Kalam cosmological argument and the two approaches to defending its ?rst premise, I respond to two objections against the notion that an actual in?nite collection is impossible: a Platonistic objection from abstract objects and a set-theoretic objection from an ambiguity in the de?nition of ‘=’ and ‘<’ as applied to sets. The thought-experiment involving Hilbert’s Hotel is central to the dialectic, and the discussion clari?es its use in supporting the Kalam cosmological argument.
Next, in 136 you challenged chaining and raised a question that suggested that you disputed infinite chaining as being implicit in claiming an infinite past. I pointed out just what sort of stage by stage successive finite phase chaining was in mind using NASA, and took it that you know that advocates of an infinite past physical world extend such chains beyond the singularity, e.g. through fluctuations in a quantum foam or the model of in effect perpetually budding off subcosmi or oscillating models etc. Such chaining to stages beyond any finite stage q in N as could be counted, is infinite. What has been in effect argued is as though one can pack in infinitely many finite stages and not become transfinite in the sense that cumulative chain length count is w or the like. If for any stage Q that is in finite reach of now, there already was an indefinite further chain that implies directly that at any Q finitely remote from now [i.e. Q in Z- effectively] the transfinite succession has already happened. This begs the question. It also does not evade the force of the point that an onward chain of cardinality aleph null is transfinite, and therefore a suprertask to span. You never get to Q as at every step beyond Q you had to complete a prior supertask to get there. You are locked into spanning the transfinite in steps, begged as a question. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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hazel:
The negative numbers have no starting point, which is the point of the proof.
They also start at zero an go on, infinitely.
Yes, but the whole theory of the natural numbers starts with the axiom that every number k has a successor k + 1.
OK.Just don't conflate natural numbers with time.ET
April 20, 2019
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DS, the same effective problem obtains for move over one room to get in one fresh guest. The same point obtains of full vs by rearranging mass, suddenly room appears. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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ET writes, "The number line has a starting point, namely zero." No, not at all. The non-negative numbers start at zero. The negative numbers have no starting point, which is the point of the proof ET writes, "“However, for any k, k-1 is farther from the present than k”, is only valid if and only if (IFF) k-1 exists." Yes, but the whole theory of the natural numbers starts with the axiom that every number k has a successor k + 1. Wikipedia says, "Like the natural numbers, Z is closed under the operations of addition and multiplication, that is, the sum and product of any two integers is an integer. However, with the inclusion of the negative natural numbers, and, importantly, 0, Z (unlike the natural numbers) is also closed under subtraction." That is, if k is an integer, then k -1 is an integer also.hazel
April 20, 2019
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hazel- The number line has a starting point, namely zero. And this: "However, for any k, k-1 is farther from the present than k", is only valid if and only if (IFF) k-1 exists.ET
April 20, 2019
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ET: 1) A abstract model of the past based on the number line 2. Proof is at 68hazel
April 20, 2019
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hazel:
P.S. My proof that the past has no beginning stands.
But what does it mean? Whose past? What past? What proof?ET
April 20, 2019
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Changed my mind about this post ...hazel
April 20, 2019
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kf writes, " when there is in the literature exactly a discussion applied to time that elaborates concerns on an actual infinite. " Where? Please point to some literature. kf write, "to the timeline since the singularity to illustrate what is meant by causally and temporally linked successive stages down to now. If you do not recognise such in say one of NASA’s cosmological timeline diagrams, then that is not our problem but yours." That has nothing to do with my discussion. Of course, time since the singularity has been finite, with a relatively known beginning. But that is not all related to the argument about the number line and the reals. P.S. My proof that the past has no beginning stands.hazel
April 20, 2019
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KF,
DS, surely, that is an irrelevancy as cited; a real one. The issue is not that guests put from room n to 2n take however long travelling but the contradiction between a full physically completely occupied hotel where no further rooms are built and simply by moving guests — physical guests — from room n to 2n [effectively, together], infinitely many odd numbered rooms from 1, 3, 5 etc are now suddenly open to receive the same cardinal number of guests afresh as were there when it was full to the gills and are still there when it is now half empty.
This hotel would have to be infinite in size, so it would be impossible for every guest n to complete his/her move in a finite amount of time. If the rooms were numbered 1, 2, 3, etc, and were arranged linearly in the obvious way, guest 1 could complete her shift quickly, while guest 10^100 will have a long walk. The hotel will never be "half empty" (and thus "half full") after the move begins.daveS
April 20, 2019
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DS, surely, that is an irrelevancy as cited; a real one. The issue is not that guests put from room n to 2n take however long travelling but the contradiction between a full physically completely occupied hotel where no further rooms are built and simply by moving guests -- physical guests -- from room n to 2n [effectively, together], infinitely many odd numbered rooms from 1, 3, 5 etc are now suddenly open to receive the same cardinal number of guests afresh as were there when it was full to the gills and are still there when it is now half empty. Bang, hotel filled again. Oops, another infinity of guests arrived, send the present occupants to rooms at 2n again, and refill. The citation from Snokes you gave does not answer. KF PS: Zeno's paradoxes have to do with sums and ratios of infinitesimals where such can readily complete an abstract infinity in finite time. We are talking about countable, finite stages that do not conveniently converge to finite displacements in finite times. Of course, rhetorically, ordinary people will easily be lost in the midst of such discussions as they have no limits, sequences, series, L'Hopital's rule etc to refer to.kairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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H, I simply point you, per 136,
kf writes, “a suggested infinite past has an actual duration going through a chain of actual stages from the remote past to now which would be infinite.” And who has suggested this, kf? Or are you tilting at straw windmills that don’t actually exist? Can you quote someone, or link to some source, which that makes an argument that an infinite chain has actually been traversed.
to the timeline since the singularity to illustrate what is meant by causally and temporally linked successive stages down to now. If you do not recognise such in say one of NASA's cosmological timeline diagrams, then that is not our problem but yours. There is no need whatsoever to appeal to authority beyond say understanding that one walks down a staircase in successive steps. As for the infinite nature of the chain, it is plainly intended that for every past stage of finite remove Q, no matter how high, there is an onward chain of antecedent steps removed to q+1, q+2 etc without limit. That is plainly transfinite. Or, do you wish to equivocate between finite and transfinite? KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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H, asserting irrelevancy again and again is different from showing it, especially when there is in the literature exactly a discussion applied to time that elaborates concerns on an actual infinite. For our simple case above, kindly explain how Hilbert's Manager can complete a tour of the rooms in decending order,thus reaching Q which is finitely removed from the front desk. Where, each room inspection requires one minute, so we see the temporal connexion directly. Notice, the actual past played out as a succession of cumulative, causally linked stages down to the present. No, it will do no good to claim that at any stage Q he has already visited the further rooms that are antecedent to reaching Q. we know these rooms are q+1, q+2 etc In short, there is an implicit transfinite traverse in stages of time, causally successive, down to Q that would have to be traversed in stages to reach Q. I suggest, it cannot be traversed in stages or finite size, due to the implied supertask. Further, this is directly relevant to any actual past as it has to cumulatively occur step by step to reach now. Every actual past stage was once the now, and gave rise to its successor through temporal-causal link, then this repeated to now. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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11:43 AM
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KF,
Present the case, kindly do not just cite a name
Are you asking for Snoke's argument? It's from this paper which was discussed here at some point.
What about the Hilbert hotel? Fans of the Kalaam argument, and fans of Hilbert’s “finite mathematics,” often try to create conundrums to prove that real infinities can’t exist. One example is the “Hilbert hotel”. In this scenario, there is a hotel with an infinite number of rooms. One night, each of the rooms is occupied. A new guest arrives and asks for a room, and is told they are all full. The guest suggests the following ingenious scheme: ask the occupant of room 1 to go to room 2 ask that occupant to move to the next room. The occupant of room 1 then sleeps in room 2, and the occupant of room 2 goes to room 3, displacing that occupant, and so on, until everyone has moved one room number higher. Since there is an infinite number of rooms, everyone will find a room, and the new guest can sleep in room 1. This seems to imply a contradiction, since all the rooms were occupied at the start, with no empty spaces, but an empty space was found. For a physicist, though, this scenario is easily dealt with by the principle of locality. It takes a finite time for an occupant to move from one room to the next. So really what has happened is that the new guest has set up a traveling wave in the chain of rooms. At all later points in time, there will be one guest walking from a one room to the next, while the other rooms are all occupied. There has not been a new room discovered, but rather a moving “excitation” (to use physics language).
daveS
April 20, 2019
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kf writes, "I have already shown how there is no good warrant for claiming an actually infinitely remote past stage of the physical cosmos." B, not Ahazel
April 20, 2019
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11:27 AM
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H, I am not obligated to show you why it is relevant to an argument about an actual infinite, that proposed actual infinites are replete with antinomies showing their utter implausibility at minimum; though there are extended arguments as I indicated that draw out very similar problems with temporal-causal succession; I suggest ponder a walking tour of all the rooms requiring just one minute per room, from the extension of the hotel away from its front desk, such will never complete due to the problem of traversing the transfinite in finite stage steps. And, it does no good to assert at some given time the manager is in room Q finitely removed from the front desk, as that simply begs the question of having visited all the further remote rooms. I have already shown how there is no good warrant for claiming an actually infinitely remote past stage of the physical cosmos. DS, Present the case, kindly do not just cite a name, note that I just gave to H a simple way to transfer to time. Where, recall, the actual past had to be traversed to get to now step by step, stage by stage. Which traverse must in this case exceed any finite value. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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11:20 AM
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hazel, I took a guess that KF intended post #137 to be directed at me (at least in part), in which case it would be on point (I believe he's talking about the metaphor WLC used in a lecture). But perhaps I'm wrong. In any case, I'm having trouble believing that KF is arguing sincerely, given how easily Snoke disposed of the Hilbert Hotel scenarios. This looks more like a rope-a-dope strategy. :-)daveS
April 20, 2019
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11:10 AM
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Do you know how long it takes to change rooms at a hotel? Of course, not everyone will ever be housed! :-) But seriously, noticed the introduction of a new irrelevancy. And who argues that " it becomes a completely different matter when one argues that a spatially extensive Hilbert hotel with physically extensive guests in it can be actualised. The Hilbert hotel is a metaphor to help think about infinity in an abstract sense: I can't imagine that anyone has seriously discussed a real "spatially extensive Hilbert hotel with physically extensive guests" B not A, again.hazel
April 20, 2019
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11:01 AM
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KF,
For example, while transfinite abstract sets such as the evens, odds and naturals may be put in 1:1 correspondence, it becomes a completely different matter when one argues that a spatially extensive Hilbert hotel with physically extensive guests in it can be actualised. Consider, as an illustration, it is full but countably infinitely more actual guests arrive. By telling existing guests to go to room 2n, room opens up for all the new guests in the odd numbered ones; without building new rooms and where both the even and odd rooms were all occupied. But, per factual assertion, it was already full, so there were no empty rooms as a physical fact.
Recall that David Snoke has shown that these illustrations do not achieve the desired effect. In the example where each guest n moves from room n to 2*n, this shifting process could never be completed in the real world. After the new guests arrive, it will never be the case that all guests are housed.daveS
April 20, 2019
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10:54 AM
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B, not A. Can you respond to 136, kf. Who is claiming the case which you are arguing against?hazel
April 20, 2019
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10:45 AM
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H, those who are making the further argument of impossibility of an actually infinite past are pointing to further issues. Such an argument may be outlined in brief but its full substantiation will be quite involved. For example, while transfinite abstract sets such as the evens, odds and naturals may be put in 1:1 correspondence, it becomes a completely different matter when one argues that a spatially extensive Hilbert hotel with physically extensive guests in it can be actualised. Consider, as an illustration, it is full but countably infinitely more actual guests arrive. By telling existing guests to go to room 2n, room opens up for all the new guests in the odd numbered ones; without building new rooms and where both the even and odd rooms were all occupied. But, per factual assertion, it was already full, so there were no empty rooms as a physical fact. Likewise if odd number guests check out the hotel is half empty but has the same number of guests as before in terms of cardinality. And more, supporting that actual physical instantiation of the infinite is impossible. Similarly, if there has been an infinite actual past then there were stages (infinitely many in fact) that are removed from the present by a number of stages which exceeds any finite value k. Arguably, on the premise that all n in Z are finite there is no room for these onward past actual stages among the range of values -k may take, which is all the values in Z-. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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10:35 AM
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kf writes, "a suggested infinite past has an actual duration going through a chain of actual stages from the remote past to now which would be infinite." And who has suggested this, kf? Or are you tilting at straw windmills that don't actually exist? Can you quote someone, or link to some source, which that makes an argument that an infinite chain has actually been traversed.hazel
April 20, 2019
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10:18 AM
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H, the issue is not whether one may define infinite abstractly as a set that extends beyond any particular finite bound, but that a suggested infinite past has an actual duration going through a chain of actual stages from the remote past to now which would be infinite. Where, as this is speaking of a proposed actual past, as was shown above, we have stages or even states of the world that CAUSALLY give rise to succeeding ones in a stepwise causal-temporal chain down to the present. In that context, duration does require a measure or count on the interval between particular stages in order to be an actual value. Where Q to N makes sense but is inevitably finite once we see that a transfinite span cannot be traversed in steps of finite scale that cumulate to achieve a traverse. Further to this, at every stage Q that is such that we may succeed to now in steps, the proposers of an infinite duration past in effect imply or assert that the infinite traverse was already traversed, begging the question of how that could ever be through an infinite regress. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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10:08 AM
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Yes B not A with me also. It's hopeless.hazel
April 20, 2019
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KF,
We have no good reasons to accept as actual suggested remote temporal stages that have succeeded in a causal chain to now that would yield an infinite duration of the past to now.
Bencze claimed to have shown it's literally mathematically/logically impossible in a brief blog post. He didn't merely say we have no good reason to accept that an IP actually occurred. (And I do agree with this, btw). Once again, I'm talking about A, you're talking about B.daveS
April 20, 2019
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08:49 AM
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DS, on the balance of warrant, there has been no infinite past. This holds physically and at least arguably, logically given what is required for an infinite duration and for an infinite actual physical entity. BTW, absent actual past states, there are no actual durations since imagined states. We have no good reasons to accept as actual suggested remote temporal stages that have succeeded in a causal chain to now that would yield an infinite duration of the past to now. KFkairosfocus
April 20, 2019
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08:40 AM
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