Hello chaps..... it's my first post on an Orbiter forum. Have been around a long time, but have only just forged a cogent topic I feel would be worthy of your wisdom.
The concept of infinity. Is it flawed?
If anything were truely infinite it would surely occupy every last speck of "space" having no defined boundary wouldn't it? If a boundary were to be measured it would cease to be infinte as one could say "Here is where it ends" If anything were infinite it would surely occupy the space I currently fill and the space you occupy, as well as all the other matter we can differentiate from the "fabric of space". In fact there would be no room for anything else if any one thing were to be infinite?
Could the humans' mind inability to comprehend infnity be down to the fact that nothing can be absolutely infinite? And those that try are trying to imagine something that can't possibly exist?
One might argue that travelling along a circlee would be infinite because it has no end and no beginning, constituting an infinite journey. But standing outside of that circle we can measure it's dimentsions, proving a finite size.
In my admittedly limited knowledge, the only thing currently being scientifically described as infinite would be the diameter of a black-hole..... "infnitely small". Does that really mean no matter how much one could "zoom in" nothing could ever be seen/measured? (Ignoring the obvious inability to measure a black hole) Or is it mathematics failure to decribe something that we have to use a concept of the human mind to fill in the gaps?
If anything were to be outwardly infinite it would as I said, surely occupy all known space in the universe. And by that definition the only candidate would be the fabric of space itself? I'm not trying to argue that space is infinite, it's a possibilty but it goes against our measurements.
Infinity has been around for a long time
But it's only used to describe something that we can not (At that time) define
Or am I a lunatic trying to argue that a mathematical tool can't exist because I can't udserstand it? Can anyone describe an example of something we know to be infinite, except the number we can't count up to?
Cheers
Marcus
The concept of infinity. Is it flawed?
If anything were truely infinite it would surely occupy every last speck of "space" having no defined boundary wouldn't it? If a boundary were to be measured it would cease to be infinte as one could say "Here is where it ends" If anything were infinite it would surely occupy the space I currently fill and the space you occupy, as well as all the other matter we can differentiate from the "fabric of space". In fact there would be no room for anything else if any one thing were to be infinite?
Could the humans' mind inability to comprehend infnity be down to the fact that nothing can be absolutely infinite? And those that try are trying to imagine something that can't possibly exist?
One might argue that travelling along a circlee would be infinite because it has no end and no beginning, constituting an infinite journey. But standing outside of that circle we can measure it's dimentsions, proving a finite size.
In my admittedly limited knowledge, the only thing currently being scientifically described as infinite would be the diameter of a black-hole..... "infnitely small". Does that really mean no matter how much one could "zoom in" nothing could ever be seen/measured? (Ignoring the obvious inability to measure a black hole) Or is it mathematics failure to decribe something that we have to use a concept of the human mind to fill in the gaps?
If anything were to be outwardly infinite it would as I said, surely occupy all known space in the universe. And by that definition the only candidate would be the fabric of space itself? I'm not trying to argue that space is infinite, it's a possibilty but it goes against our measurements.
Infinity has been around for a long time
Or am I a lunatic trying to argue that a mathematical tool can't exist because I can't udserstand it? Can anyone describe an example of something we know to be infinite, except the number we can't count up to?
Cheers
Marcus