OnlyAmbrose wrote:Turned 17 a few weeks ago
Just ... Cannot .... I mean .... how can....
Wait let me rephrase .....
DUDE!!!!

Moderator: Community Team
Riao wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Turned 17 a few weeks ago
Just ... Cannot .... I mean .... how can....
Wait let me rephrase .....
DUDE!!!!
flashleg8 wrote:I'd just like to say to Ambrose re: the coin toss/infinity answer. You are starting to win me round slightly - I believe you are right, I suppose, to correct me that each of the unlikely possible outcomes could occur give an infinite number of tosses. By extension of your logical argument there could indeed (and must in fact) be gods of all shapes and sizes existing, somewhere in the infinite universe. I do not accept this though. Although the universe is infinite, I do not believe that matter is infinite within the universe. I prefer to subscribe to the "expanding balloon" model. In which case the universe we know expanded from a single point and time and space do not exist beyond the sphere of the balloon. Therein lies the problem - man finds the infinite nature of the universe so impossible to comprehend that at the edges all logic breaks down.
walrus wrote:I'm just going to let most of this stuff go over my head and learn about it later, but you say yourself that some schools of mathematics treat 0*infinity as 0 and others as undefined. So the basis of your argument hinges on an entirely different mathematical debate, no?
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
WalrusesRN wrote:I'll take it your NOT a teenager then Riao?
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Now check out the x axis in quadrant I. As x gets very big, y gets very small, and very close to zero. Therefore, as x approaches infinity, y approaches zero.
Riao wrote:WalrusesRN wrote:I'll take it your NOT a teenager then Riao?
No. I haven't been for quite a while.OnlyAmbrose wrote:Now check out the x axis in quadrant I. As x gets very big, y gets very small, and very close to zero. Therefore, as x approaches infinity, y approaches zero.
But if x is infinite, y will never actually reach zero. So doesn't this actually show that 1/infinity /= 0? Perhaps I just can't wrap my head around this.(I've been struggling to figure out the concept of dividing any number into an infinite number. It just doesn't make sense to me. But then I didn't take calculus).
OnlyAmbrose wrote:
But if you're an atheist, you MUST believe that it DID happen, and that something DID break through your barrier. Otherwise, you'd have a hard time explaining where matter came from.
And besides, who are we to be setting laws for other universes? There's no way you can even begin to prove that universes don't interact somehow. And, given that there are infinite of them, I don't see why some of them couldn't. Remember, infinite includes ANYTHING you can ever possibly imagine. (My proof for why there must be an infinite amount of universes, presuming there is no God, come from my post about where everything came from).
But then again, we must remember that infinite is a logical fallacy.
flashleg8 wrote:
all matter for the universe was created from a single point of matter, infinitely dense
OnlyAmbrose wrote:There's a major flaw in the argument that energy has always existed simply because of the second law of thermodynamics.
Neutrino wrote:Actually, it isn't. It is anything you can imagine, under the constraints of applicable rules.
Neutrino wrote:What makes you think the Second Law of Thermodynamics has always existed?
Neutrino wrote:What make you say this? Matter before the Big Bang couldn't be infinitely dense because there wasn't an infinite amount of it. It may have been confined to an infinitely small space, but to the best of my understanding this still dosen't make a finite amount of matter infinite.
Neutrino wrote:What would make you think that infinity/infinity = 0/1? To the best of my knowledge (I like that phrase ) infinity/ infinity = infinity.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Neutrino wrote:Actually, it isn't. It is anything you can imagine, under the constraints of applicable rules.
This I'll answer with your own words:Neutrino wrote:What makes you think the Second Law of Thermodynamics has always existed?
Applicable rules are flexible, if we're under the presumption that multiple universes exist.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Of course, even this argument collapses on itself because infinite doesn't exist. And I don't believe anyone here subscribes to the idea that matter is infinite anyawys.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:infinity / infinity is undefined. Not zero, not one, not infinity, just undefined. But like Jehan said, if you're using infinity as a "mathematical construct" (in heavycola's words) in a derivative problem, then there are methods (most notably l'hopital's rule) to determine what infinity / infinity equals. In such problems, the answer can be anything: 0, 1, 3/4, 7, 8, 9.143, infinity, you name it. For our purposes, it's best just to call it undefined.
Neutrino wrote:flashleg8 wrote:
all matter for the universe was created from a single point of matter, infinitely dense
What make you say this? Matter before the Big Bang couldn't be infinitely dense because there wasn't an infinite amount of it. It may have been confined to an infinitely small space, but to the best of my understanding this still dosen't make a finite amount of matter infinite.
Jehan wrote:wait why? density equals mass/volume, if volume equals zero then wouldn't it be infinite? if something is a point its volume is zero.
Jehan wrote:wait why? density equals mass/volume, if volume equals zero then wouldn't it be infinite? if something is a point its volume is zero.
Jehan wrote:if you have a singularity i was under the impression its volume is zero, and since anything positive/0 is infinity, the density is infinity.
Neutrino wrote:Jehan wrote:if you have a singularity i was under the impression its volume is zero, and since anything positive/0 is infinity, the density is infinity.
But a singularity's volume isn't 0. If it were, it would make it rather difficult for anything to enter it, because it would also be required to have a volume of 0 and therefore any infalling matter would also become a Black Hole in it's final moments and the event horison would be ringing constantly.
Jehan wrote:Neutrino wrote:Jehan wrote:if you have a singularity i was under the impression its volume is zero, and since anything positive/0 is infinity, the density is infinity.
But a singularity's volume isn't 0. If it were, it would make it rather difficult for anything to enter it, because it would also be required to have a volume of 0 and therefore any infalling matter would also become a Black Hole in it's final moments and the event horison would be ringing constantly.
i thought we were talking about the singularity at the beginning of time, where the volume was in fact zero, well according to general relativity, which is the theory i am assuming we are working with since its the one which predicts singularities.
Jehan wrote:really? cos i'm working with the theory of the big bang singularity being all that was before dimensions were around, no dimensions suggests point of zero volume.
Users browsing this forum: jonesthecurl, jusplay4fun