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Donald, Allen. (2003). The History of Infinity. Texas A & M Mathematics. Retrieved 2019-11-15.

has been cited by the following article:

Article

Mind and Infinity

1Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India


Applied Mathematics and Physics. 2021, Vol. 9 No. 1, 16-27
DOI: 10.12691/amp-9-1-4
Copyright © 2021 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Abhijit Manohar. Mind and Infinity. Applied Mathematics and Physics. 2021; 9(1):16-27. doi: 10.12691/amp-9-1-4.

Correspondence to: Abhijit  Manohar, Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India. Email: armanohar977@gmail.com

Abstract

The paper presents the general intuition of the concept of infinity. The Ramanujan’s Infinite series is reviewed in the light of proposed theory though the mathematical proof is presented more convincingly later in the article. The article discusses the cosmology and the size of universe and contrasts the finite vs. infinite universe arguments. The article questions and comments about the existence of transcendental numbers and Cantor’s Diagonal argument and also proves the problems with cardinality of infinity. It further gives other instantiations of intuitions and the consequences of mathematical infinity in limits, calculus, irrationals and series, respectively. The paper also suggests empirical methods for confirming the understanding of infinity presented in this paper in future. The 2 arguments – flexibility of mind (a priori intuition) and problem of the cardinality of infinity are presented and proved in this article. Both cognitive and mathematical explanation is provided to reinforce the idea that infinity is an a priori intuition without any physical counterpart.

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