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05-08-2002, 06:56 AM | #11 |
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If a point by definition has zero volume, and a line by definition is made up of an infinite number of points, how can a line have a length greater than zero?
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05-08-2002, 07:29 AM | #12 | |
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05-08-2002, 08:24 AM | #13 |
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A point has a dimension of zero, and a line has a dimension of one; correct? Yet the greater dimension is more fundamental? If so, is a plane more fundamental than a line?
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05-08-2002, 10:19 AM | #14 | |||
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05-08-2002, 01:49 PM | #15 |
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So then line is the most fundamental geometric "shape"? Is this one reason why String Theory has high potential?
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05-08-2002, 05:05 PM | #16 | |
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05-08-2002, 05:36 PM | #17 |
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Jarlaxle...
With respect to this question you ask: "If a point by definition has zero volume, and a line by definition is made up of an infinite number of points, how can a line have a length greater than zero?" Traditional subject-predicate logic was never able to solve this problem, though Newton had his finger on it with his fluxion theory of the calculus. That is, prior to modern mathematics (roughly since the advent of mathematics based on the new logic of quantification, developed by Frege, in 1879), time was used as that variable used to solve the problem you raise. That is, integration and differentiation were based on the flux theory developed by Newton. With respect to how modern mathematics solves this problem, you might want to take a look at any book on real analysis in which a line is constructed from a continuum of points, i.e., is put in one-to-one relationship with the so-called real number continuum. It makes use of a modern theory of linear order. owleye |
05-10-2002, 08:32 AM | #18 | |
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05-10-2002, 10:41 AM | #19 |
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Kenny, you're such a neo-Kantist...doh!
What is a neo-Kantist in this respect? I never studied much Kant, so I wonder how this term would apply. Adrian |
05-10-2002, 11:53 AM | #20 |
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Adrian! I guess I should have known I would run into familiar faces if I peeked my head out of Misc.
Sorry for the off topic insert... |
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