It is explicitly not a value. The reason you cannot perform arithmetic on infinity is because it has no value. It has cardinality but that is not unique. The set of all integers is infinite as is the set of all real numbers but they have different cardinality as integers are countably infinite whereas real numbers are not countable infinite.
But it is a value. Just one we tend to avoid by claiming it doesn’t exist or is impossible… Our minds just have a hard time imagining it, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
MacGuffin94@lemmy.world 1 year ago
FooBarrington@lemmy.world 1 year ago
No, it’s not a value. It’s defined as not being a value. No after how much you bend and break maths, infinity will never be a value. Why do you keep telling people wrong things?
0ops@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Our minds? Infinity isn’t something we don’t understand - we invented the concept of infinity. The mathematics community agreed on its definition, which includes the fact that infinity is not a real number, it literally does not exist. Show me infinity, I’ll give you infinity+1.
You deciding that infinity means something else is not a math problem but a language problem, so if being right about this is that important to you, start a petition or something
doctorn@r.nf 1 year ago
So you believe the universe just ends somewhere with nothing behind it?
0ops@lemm.ee 1 year ago
What’s that got to do with anything? Infinity is just shorthand for “ever-increasing number”.
doctorn@r.nf 1 year ago
Uhm… No it’s not… 🤨