@RupertAndCheese Meh, yeah, kinda. Youre doing science a disservice though by saying that its mere speculation. General relativity has been verified to a lot of decimal places in a lot of experiments. These real infinities cant be observed in all their "infiniteness" with our eyes or ears, but you can experience infinity to the extent that you can call math a "sense".
@RupertAndCheese Yeah, actually, I meant to comment to the other guy. I dont know though. No, you cant have an infinite amount of yarn, or an infinitely big burrito, but there are a lot of mathematical concepts involving infinite and infinitesimal things that have easy to understand (relatively) real world applications. Indeed, having a continuum of any kind (a line, a piece of time, frequency, etc..) has some inherently infinite properties.
@htomerif What I mean is that I cannot DEMONSTRATE it, it is impossible to do so, that I know.
Also I'm kinda confused, did you mean to comment this on the other guy, or me?
Anyway, I didn't mean that infinity is impossible (I don't know that for certain), just that it's beyond reasonable capability to show an example of it.
@RupertAndCheese I see a lot of people saying "infinity is a physical impossibility", especially the great retard William Lane Craig. Please Wikipedia "Black Hole". At least to the best of our understanding of physics, the singularity at the center of a black hole does actually have real infinite density.
nonstampcollector, theramintrees, darkmatter2525, and the likes of them all make way better vids
scowley86 1 day ago
was the form of the Holy Spirit here based on American Dad?
InverseAgonist 1 week ago
@htomerif Yeah I suppose it does imply a sort of stupidity...
And agreed :)
RupertAndCheese 1 week ago
@RupertAndCheese Meh, yeah, kinda. Youre doing science a disservice though by saying that its mere speculation. General relativity has been verified to a lot of decimal places in a lot of experiments. These real infinities cant be observed in all their "infiniteness" with our eyes or ears, but you can experience infinity to the extent that you can call math a "sense".
htomerif 1 week ago
@htomerif We simply do not understand enough about the universe to know these things, any statement about these things is but speculation :>
RupertAndCheese 1 week ago
@RupertAndCheese Yeah, actually, I meant to comment to the other guy. I dont know though. No, you cant have an infinite amount of yarn, or an infinitely big burrito, but there are a lot of mathematical concepts involving infinite and infinitesimal things that have easy to understand (relatively) real world applications. Indeed, having a continuum of any kind (a line, a piece of time, frequency, etc..) has some inherently infinite properties.
htomerif 1 week ago
@htomerif What I mean is that I cannot DEMONSTRATE it, it is impossible to do so, that I know.
Also I'm kinda confused, did you mean to comment this on the other guy, or me?
Anyway, I didn't mean that infinity is impossible (I don't know that for certain), just that it's beyond reasonable capability to show an example of it.
RupertAndCheese 1 week ago
WTF.
IsaacOfWolfbreed 1 week ago
@Gorgormcgor Sorry, comment to the wrong person. The singularity at the center of a black hole has infinite density. caio.
htomerif 1 week ago
@RupertAndCheese I see a lot of people saying "infinity is a physical impossibility", especially the great retard William Lane Craig. Please Wikipedia "Black Hole". At least to the best of our understanding of physics, the singularity at the center of a black hole does actually have real infinite density.
htomerif 1 week ago