2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The "Absurd" Math It Begets

For at least 2,500 years now, one of the most—if not the most—hotly, widely, and often contested issues is the notion of the continuum. It’s a notion which looks upon time, space, locomotion, and change as continuous, which is to say it implies there is no limit to the smallness of the smallest segment of each. Thereby, it necessarily invokes the notion of in¬finite divisibility. The latter then demands mathematical conclusions so mani¬festly self-contradictory, they boggle the mind no less than does the notion of a square cir¬cle. No won¬der, then, they move many a renowned thinker, such as John Locke and David Hume, to proclaim those conclusions “absurd”. See my quotes from them on pages II & VIII.

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2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The "Absurd" Math It Begets

For at least 2,500 years now, one of the most—if not the most—hotly, widely, and often contested issues is the notion of the continuum. It’s a notion which looks upon time, space, locomotion, and change as continuous, which is to say it implies there is no limit to the smallness of the smallest segment of each. Thereby, it necessarily invokes the notion of in¬finite divisibility. The latter then demands mathematical conclusions so mani¬festly self-contradictory, they boggle the mind no less than does the notion of a square cir¬cle. No won¬der, then, they move many a renowned thinker, such as John Locke and David Hume, to proclaim those conclusions “absurd”. See my quotes from them on pages II & VIII.

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2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The

2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The "Absurd" Math It Begets

by Edward N. Haas
2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The

2013 Update To Esoptrics' Try To End The Notion Of The Continuum & The "Absurd" Math It Begets

by Edward N. Haas

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Overview

For at least 2,500 years now, one of the most—if not the most—hotly, widely, and often contested issues is the notion of the continuum. It’s a notion which looks upon time, space, locomotion, and change as continuous, which is to say it implies there is no limit to the smallness of the smallest segment of each. Thereby, it necessarily invokes the notion of in¬finite divisibility. The latter then demands mathematical conclusions so mani¬festly self-contradictory, they boggle the mind no less than does the notion of a square cir¬cle. No won¬der, then, they move many a renowned thinker, such as John Locke and David Hume, to proclaim those conclusions “absurd”. See my quotes from them on pages II & VIII.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781491846988
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication date: 01/08/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 324
File size: 3 MB
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