• myslsl@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    To me you have demonstrated:

    1. You don’t know even the most basic definitions of the things you are trying to talk about.

    2. You are possibly too willfully stupid to bother to learn said definitions.

    3. You are capable of babbling incoherently about things you do not understand ad nauseum.

    • dbug13@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      It seems you are having a hard time comprehending this. I get it’s hard to learn new things. But I can walk you through it.

      TL;DR: If an object can be measured, in any way, it’s a finite object. Infinity cannot be measured.

      1. In the posted problem the train tracks themselves are finite objects, as they each have a starting point, the fork the train is in front of.
      2. The train tracks are bound to physical ground, ground that is itself bound to a finite world, a world has a shape, that can be measured, so it is a finite object.
      3. If the shape of the world the train tracks are on is round, then these seemingly infinite tracks will eventually loop back on themselves. If the tracks loop back on themselves, then they must eventually converge as the train starts out the problem on a single track. So neither of the tracks are infinite.
      4. It’s important to understand that the tracks are finite objects, as finite objects exist by different rules then infinity itself.
      5. I’m not arguing that uncountable numbers are a thing. What I am stating is that if those numbers exist within a finite universe, then they have a lifespan, the lifespan of the finite universe that contains them, thus those numbers aren’t infinite, uncountable yes, but not truly infinite. As I have stated many times, finite objects, like the finite universe, can only create other finite objects. Infinity cannot be created, therefore there is only one infinity, infinity itself, all other objects that can be measured are finite objects. This also means if infinity decides to create anything, it can only produce finite objects. Infinity cannot produce another infinity, as the act of creation would be a measurable starting point.
      6. This is why the statement (some infinities are smaller than other infinities) is an illogical statement. If you can measure multiple infinities, then none of those objects are infinite, as one object can be measured to be smaller or larger than the other. And as I keep stating, infinity cannot be measured. If your measurement is uncountable, then the measurement itself is finite.
      • myslsl@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I considered reading and responding to this big long word salad you sent me, but I realized you were just further demonstrating the three points from my last post. Lmao, good luck.

        Edit: Feel free to show me you learned the definitions I asked you about by answering my list of definition questions I posed to you a while ago by the way. I’m still fine with continuing if you do that.

        • dbug13@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          I get it it’s hard to learn new things. I’m still willing to walk you through it. I’m not sure how much more simple I can state it for you, it’s already pretty simplified, but I’m still willing to try. Just let me know.