lpetrich
Contributor
Except that there is a theory of such final values:Something that goes on without end cannot have a final value.
Except that there is a theory of such final values:Something that goes on without end cannot have a final value.
It is how infinite digits is defined.
It is digits without the possibility of a last digit.
Digits that go on without end.
A number has a value.
Something that goes on without end cannot have a final value.
0.9999... approaches 1 but it never has a final value so it does not equal 1.
Again. Australia is a label of something real.
"Three" is not.
"Three" is not some other thing the label is pointing to.
It describes nothing else but itself.
It may have some other things it is mathematically similar to but "three" or "3" is only "three" or "3".
It is not something else. There is nothing else for it to be. There is nothing behind the label like "Australia".
It. Does. Not. Matter.
Numbers may or may not be real, under whatever definition of "real" you may have in mind. Things don't need to be real in order to be distinct from their labels. The character Gandalf and the name "Gandalf" are not the same thing despite the fact that both where created the self-same instant by J. R. R. Tolkien. The fact that Gandalf isn't real doesn't make it so that Gandalf and Tharkûn, as he's known to the Dwarves, are distinct entities.
Your argument that "3", "2.9..", "0b11" (i. e., binary 3) and the English word "three" are distinct entities - and must be because one has repeating digits while the others don't - is like saying that Tharkûn and Gandalf are different characters, and must be because one of them contains non-ASCII characters your phone display correctly.
There is something behind the word "Gandalf" even if it is a fictional character.
There is nothing behind the word "three", nothing behind the character "3".
As I'd posted earlier, untermensche seems to advocatefinitism. I don't find finitism very convincing, because I don't see any fundamental difference between a rule that generates all the elements of a finite set and one that generates all the elements of an infinite set.
A rule is not the same thing as the product of the rule.
In fact they are entirely separate.
1/3 is really a rule not a value.
There is something behind the word "Gandalf" even if it is a fictional character.
There is nothing behind the word "three", nothing behind the character "3".
Sure there is. A mathematical concept. Whether mathematical concepts are themselves fictional doesn't enter consideration - you've just admitted that fictional entities too are distinct from their labels with "Gandalf" != Gandalf.
As I'd posted earlier, untermensche seems to advocatefinitism. I don't find finitism very convincing, because I don't see any fundamental difference between a rule that generates all the elements of a finite set and one that generates all the elements of an infinite set.
A rule is not the same thing as the product of the rule.
In fact they are entirely separate.
1/3 is really a rule not a value.
"1/3" is a string containing two digits and a punctuation character. In the language of fractional notation, it refers to a number, the same number that's referred to by "0.4" in base 12, "0.333..." In Base 10, "0.010101..." In base 2. Semiology 101. Freshen up on your Saussure.
Why do you imagine that it takes a non-zero amount of time to evaluate the '...' in the expression '0.333...'?
There is something behind the word "Gandalf" even if it is a fictional character.
There is nothing behind the word "three", nothing behind the character "3".
Sure there is. A mathematical concept. Whether mathematical concepts are themselves fictional doesn't enter consideration - you've just admitted that fictional entities too are distinct from their labels with "Gandalf" != Gandalf.
It is defined.
That is how it exists. It does not exist before that.
I have said many times that all things in mathematics are defined. None of it exists without a human mind capable of having thoughts using conceptions.
But Gandalf is a person on the screen.
There is nothing but the definition of three.
You can't have "three" slap Harry Potter in a movie or even appear in a movie.
All you could ever show is the symbol pointing to the definition. As if all you could show on screen of Gandalf were the letters that make up his name.
Why do you imagine that it takes a non-zero amount of time to evaluate the '...' in the expression '0.333...'?
Giving an equation that produces the infinite string of digits is not evaluating it.
It is merely imagining some way it can be produced.
"Evaluating it" has no rational meaning here.
The digits repeat infinitely.
By definition there can be no final digit.
A thing with no possibility of a final digit cannot have a final value.
Period.
Why do you imagine that it takes a non-zero amount of time to evaluate the '...' in the expression '0.333...'?
Giving an equation that produces the infinite string of digits is not evaluating it.
It is merely imagining some way it can be produced.
"Evaluating it" has no rational meaning here.
The digits repeat infinitely.
By definition there can be no final digit.
A thing with no possibility of a final digit cannot have a final value.
Period.
"digits" are not a property of numbers.
Fify. And it's language specific: in base 16, "a" is a digit."digits" are not a property of numbers.
A digit is anumbercharcter used in identifying numbers.
3 is, but "3" isn't. In base 2, it's not even a valid digit.3 is a defined number.
Category error. A digit doesn't have digits. It has hooks and lines and if we're very generous code points (more precise would be the code points are external to the digits and mapped to them).You can't say a digit repeats infinitely AND has a final digit.
That is simple contradiction.
It is defined.
That is how it exists. It does not exist before that.
Quite unlike Gandalf, who existed long before Tolkien was even born, right?
Things don't need to be real in order to be distinct from their labels.
Fify
You can't say a digit repeats infinitely AND has a final digit.
Category error. A digit has hooks and lines and if we're very generous code points (more precise would be the code points are external to the digits and mapped to them).
That is simple contradiction.
Argument based on equivocation.
No you are right here but this was your point:
Things don't need to be real in order to be distinct from their labels.
You are now saying Gandalf is not distinct from his definition or label pointing to the definition.
Just like "three".
All you have done is given another definition not shown mine is wrong.
Category error. A digit has hooks and lines and if we're very generous code points (more precise would be the code points are external to the digits and mapped to them).
Again, all you have done is provided your own idiosyncratic capricious definition, not shown my definition is in error.
That is simple contradiction.
Argument based on equivocation.
Conclusion based on burying your head in the sand and only looking at other topics and ignoring everything said.
Why do you imagine that it takes a non-zero amount of time to evaluate the '...' in the expression '0.333...'?
Giving an equation that produces the infinite string of digits is not evaluating it.
It is merely imagining some way it can be produced.
"Evaluating it" has no rational meaning here.
The digits repeat infinitely.
By definition there can be no final digit.
A thing with no possibility of a final digit cannot have a final value.
Period.
Why do you imagine that it takes a non-zero amount of time to evaluate the '...' in the expression '0.333...'?
Giving an equation that produces the infinite string of digits is not evaluating it.
It is merely imagining some way it can be produced.
"Evaluating it" has no rational meaning here.
The digits repeat infinitely.
By definition there can be no final digit.
A thing with no possibility of a final digit cannot have a final value.
Period.
What The Fuck is a "final value"?
Numbers don't have "final values". They have values.
All you have done is given another definition not shown mine is wrong.
Again, all you have done is provided your own idiosyncratic capricious definition, not shown my definition is in error.
Argument based on equivocation.
Conclusion based on burying your head in the sand and only looking at other topics and ignoring everything said.
Sure, you can invent your own private language in which the words "digit" and "number" have your own private meaning; most three-year-olds go through a phase like that. But if you think you can use that to prove anything about the concepts others are talking about when using those words, I'll just redefine "the world's biggest idiot" to refer to you and you only, and have thereby proven that you're the world's biggest idiot in the conventional sense.
What The Fuck is a "final value"?
Numbers don't have "final values". They have values.
A final value is distinct from an ever changing value.
If 3's go on infinitely then the value is ever changing.
It is never reaching a final value.
There can never be a final 3.
What The Fuck is a "final value"?
Numbers don't have "final values". They have values.
A final value is distinct from an ever changing value.
If 3's go on infinitely then the value is ever changing.
It is never reaching a final value.
There can never be a final 3.
This is abject nonsense. A number doesn't have a changing value.
This is abject nonsense. A number doesn't have a changing value.
If you try to express the number you will get an ever changing number.
You will add 3's forever.
It will never finish.
If you don't express the number but merely imagine it has expressed you have violated the definition which says it can never be fully expressed. Infinite digits means there can never possibly be a last digit.
0.333... is not a value. It has no final value.
It is something else. It is approaching a value. It can by definition never get there.