In zeno’s paradox, one simply steps over the half way mark as one’s feet are simply to big to step only halfway.RJG wrote: ↑November 1st, 2018, 5:01 pmIt seems you have this backwards. The truths of science constantly change as they are based on experiential whims; on the 'uncertain' nature of 'experiential' evidence. Whereas the truths of logic/math are constant/unchangeable, and are not reliant upon said subjective views.BigBango wrote:Abstract thinking is not "fantasy", it is "logic", mathematics, the notion of time and other mental tools we have with which we can use to try to understand the nature of reality. Science, on the other hand, takes our abstract theories and uses them to collect "real" data about the nature of reality. It just turns out that reality, as known through exhausting testing, does not always conform to what our abstract thinking has predicted.
Logic/math are 'a priori' (pre-experiential) truth. Science is an 'a posteriori' (post experiential) truth. Therefore, Logic always trumps Science. Although I have great respect for science, it pales in comparison to the certainty/truth of logic (and math).
Zeno's Paradox -- Zeno's paradoxes states that I can't walk over to you because I first have to get halfway there, and once I do, I still have to cover half the remaining distance, and once I get there I have to cover half of that remaining distance, ad infinitum. There are an infinite number of halfway points, and so according to (flawed) logic, I'll never be able to get there. But it's easy to prove this false by simply doing it, which we can all do. So we seemingly have a paradox, a contradiction, something that seems true but which, clearly, is not.BigBango wrote:Xeno's paradox about motion is only a paradox that exists in the world of abstract mathematics where there are an infinite number of points along any segment of a line and we assume things in reality move from one point to another in that abstract space. But what we find is that in the real world things move through a discrete quantized space unlike the real number line.
Since true paradoxes don't actually exist (as they are not logically possible), where is the flaw in this seemingly paradox?
Zeno's paradox, as written, conveniently disregards the dimension of 'time' to falsely denounce the possibility of 'motion'. Like a good magician, Zeno has his audience focus on the infinite number of 'distance' segments (and not on the infinitely decreasing 'time'), which leads our minds to (falsely) conclude that it would therefore take for-ev-ver (an infinite amount of 'time') to cross over an infinite number of halfway points. But, this is not the case. For each and every halfway point, time is reduced in half (it takes half as much time to arrive at each halfway point).
For example: I can walk 1 yard per second. So if I were to walk to the halfway point (50 yards) across a football field, it would take me 50 seconds. And then 25 seconds later, I'll find myself at the next halfway point. And then 12.5 seconds later, at the next halfway point. And after 100 seconds have transpired, I find myself magically standing in the end zone.
It is 'time' that propels me through space (and across the football field).
Zeno's paradox only proves, that without time, motion is impossible. But we already knew that. We already knew that motion can't occur without the pre-existence of time. Motion occurred (I traveled from 0 yard line to 100 yard line), therefore Time must exist. Now we have proof! Thanks Zeno
Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
- Present awareness
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
- Present awareness
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
- RJG
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
Great answer Present Awareness!Present awareness wrote:In zeno’s paradox, one simply steps over the half way mark as one’s feet are simply too big to step only halfway.
- Atreyu
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
The Universe has a Beginning but this Beginning has always existed!
I know that sounds strange, but I'm convinced that it's one of the best ways to explain this paradoxical truth about the Universe....
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
Hi Atreyu, ...what's "paradoxical" about an always existing universe?Atreyu wrote:The Universe has a Beginning but this Beginning has always existed!
I know that sounds strange, but I'm convinced that it's one of the best ways to explain this paradoxical truth about the Universe....
Is it because we have been brainwashed (i.e. "culturally indoctrinated") to blindly believe that things MUST have a start/beginning? Is it then this 'blind belief' that creates the "unfathomable-ness" or the "paradoxical" feeling and disbelief of "always existing" (or existing without a start)?
Why MUST THERE BE a start or a beginning to an existing element??? --- I see no rational/logical reason why "no beginning" or "always existing" cannot be true to existing things/stuff. ...I only see the (sometimes emotional/passionate) 'non-rational' defense of our blind faiths/beliefs/indoctrinations.
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
[Atreyu wrote:
In the Beginning, there was only Darkness upon the Deep. The All was nothing more than an Omniscient Black Whole, a Unified Field of Omnipresent unspoken of quantity, number, of Singularities having no relative, numerical, value, having a numerical value of Zero-0, Nada, Nothingness.
The Universe has a Beginning but this Beginning has always existed!
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Re: Did the universe exist for ever or does it have a beginning?
2023/2024 Philosophy Books of the Month
Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul
by Mitzi Perdue
February 2023
Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness
by Chet Shupe
March 2023