though I imagine, somehow, we'll be able to turn this into a discussion on george bush or something.ANYWAY, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno's_paradoxesZeno's Paradoxes:
1/19/2006 11:06:54 AM
I'm having a hard time relating this thread to cheese.BAN DIRTYGREEK
1/19/2006 11:14:22 AM
ban everyone who doesn't support the cheese threads
1/19/2006 11:17:11 AM
OK, I didn't even understand the third one. As for the former two, the "paradox" is that the reader is led to believe that an infinite number of time intervals implies infinite time, which is not true. A series, which is a "sum of infinite number of terms" may nonetheless converge to a finite number, as I hope most of us here learned in Calculus.So yes, they have been disproven.
1/19/2006 11:27:53 AM
So before I take a step I need to take half a step?Oh god no, now I'm stuck in my chair because of this crap.
1/19/2006 1:09:20 PM
well, that's sort of the point - that your idea of the universe is far different from the reality of it
1/19/2006 1:20:03 PM
i don't get the first onei can understand the second and third one, but at the same time i think they're stupid
1/19/2006 6:59:05 PM
These are dumb.
1/19/2006 7:20:17 PM
i remember talking about that first one in high school calculus. series and sequences and whatnot[Edited on January 19, 2006 at 7:23 PM. Reason : .]
1/19/2006 7:23:29 PM
As my "doppleganger" has noted an infinite number of time intervals need not imply an eternity, we need only require that the time increments become suitably infinitesimal. More basic than this we should ask ourselves is it true that this is what happens just because we can write down sequences and series that describe continuous motion through the calculus. As far as we can measure time viewed as continuous has sucessfully modeled physical phenomenon, but is it possible that there exists some fundamental timescale underwhich we cannot measure? On general grounds through the lense of quantum mechanics this seems reasonable. In you junior course on QM you should learn that systems that are bounded have discrete spectra. In contrast, the momentum of a free particle is not discrete rather it takes a continuous spectrum as it has no boundary conditions placed on it (it's free). Now consider the universe as a whole, if it is bounded then it ought to follow that the spectrum of the position operator is discrete. In view of relativity discreteness in time and space are linked. Clearly such discreteness is at such a fine scale that we cannot detect it at the present, but if we could get small enough then we might have to take quantum leaps ( very tiny leaps) in space and time. And if this is the case then we avoid all such paradoxes physically even in principal, simply because this view says that the continuum is an illusion. Instead the universe is made of many manymany many... many space time points, but not infinitely many. So all the sums we thought were infinite were actually finite. This probably solves alot of standing conceptual dilemmas in physics thatfollow from trying to overextend an idealization. Anyway, all mathematical models of "nature" are likely wrong. We see but a shadow of things unseen.Any physical model extended to far is likely to do one of two things,1. fail experimentally2. fail calculationally ( it would be incalculcable )Newtonian physics fails in the sense of 1. at high speeds. QM fails in the sense of 2 in describingmacroscopic physics, it's just inpossible to really even set-up the whole wavefunction for systemsthat Newtonian mechanics very successfully describes through simple mathematics.
1/19/2006 7:50:14 PM
the first and to some extent the second one, is more clearly explained by this thought experiment:suppose you are standing 8 feet from the wall of a room. you walk halfway to the wall, so now you are 4 feet from the wall. then you walk halfway again, so you are 2 feet from the wall. you keep doing this, and your distance from the wall decreases each time you walk halfway to the wall:1 ft1/2 ft1/4 ft1/8 ft1/16 ft1/32 ftand so on.but, you are always some distance from the wall (because the serious above goes on forever). so, you will never reach the wall.
1/19/2006 10:25:58 PM
or i could just walk 8 feet
1/19/2006 10:34:22 PM
^^ Your series fails due to rounding error. You cannot walk 1/1048576 ftAnd even if you could, it would take you an infinitesimal amount of time. Of course, your excercise does mean one thing: As you approach, but never reach the wall, the current time is approaching the time of your arrival, but never reaching it.
1/19/2006 11:12:19 PM
the easiest way to circumvent paradoxes one and two is to aim further than the distance you are headed. instead of aiming for a specific point which is where your destination is, aim a certain distance further and then in progressing halfway there you will have achieved the destination.the third paradox is met by the heisenberg uncertainty principle, which applies to particle physics. (i think) you cannot know both the speed and location of a particle at any one time.
1/20/2006 2:14:51 AM
1/20/2006 9:41:28 AM