This idea occurred to me within the last week or so. When thinking about mathematical things I've noticed how you have finite values and amounts, but then if you follow a process (such as counting) out indefinitely you sometimes end up with an infinite value. Now in mathematics I've read or gotten the sense that many mathematicians do not consider infinity to be an "entity", if that's an okay way to say it. They say, more or less, that infinity is merely a concept, it doesn't actually "exist" because you can never actually reach it. It seems to me that this is a view strongly influenced by materialism - in a sense, they consider infinity imaginary like they consider the idea of any sort of God imaginary. At least the concept of infinity is useful, they might say.
Now, in exploring spiritual and philosophical realms of thought, considering Infinity as a real entity, as real as any countable number (although not a number itself exactly), seems to have more credibility, maybe. Infinity is required to explain how consciousness could exist, it seems, and how the Universe could be more than a machine.
One thing I've noticed in thinking about finity versus infinity is that the two of them don't seem to exactly "mix". If you add a finite number to infinity, it is still infinity just the same, and this is also true if you subtract, divide, or multiply. If you start at a finite number, you can't "count to infinity" without giving yourself infinite "time" to do it. Likewise, if you start from infinity, you cannot "count your way out" and reach the finite numbers. So if the finite and the infinite both exist, how do they interface? Instead of counting forever, it seems like some sort of transcendence is required to "reach infinity". It's not exactly like you cross some line and "suddenly it's all infinite!" It seems more like if this bridging must happen, it would be maybe like a "realm border"; a sort of intangible crossing into another reality.
In any case, we experience a world that seems to be full of "finite" expressions. And certainly we can model the finite within computers, so there is some kind of reality to it. So how does the infinity "behind" consciousness interface with the "finite" material world? I'm wondering if this could be part of an idea as to what Information is. Information could be the interthreading that allows the tangible and intangible to associate with one another.
Now, in exploring spiritual and philosophical realms of thought, considering Infinity as a real entity, as real as any countable number (although not a number itself exactly), seems to have more credibility, maybe. Infinity is required to explain how consciousness could exist, it seems, and how the Universe could be more than a machine.
One thing I've noticed in thinking about finity versus infinity is that the two of them don't seem to exactly "mix". If you add a finite number to infinity, it is still infinity just the same, and this is also true if you subtract, divide, or multiply. If you start at a finite number, you can't "count to infinity" without giving yourself infinite "time" to do it. Likewise, if you start from infinity, you cannot "count your way out" and reach the finite numbers. So if the finite and the infinite both exist, how do they interface? Instead of counting forever, it seems like some sort of transcendence is required to "reach infinity". It's not exactly like you cross some line and "suddenly it's all infinite!" It seems more like if this bridging must happen, it would be maybe like a "realm border"; a sort of intangible crossing into another reality.
In any case, we experience a world that seems to be full of "finite" expressions. And certainly we can model the finite within computers, so there is some kind of reality to it. So how does the infinity "behind" consciousness interface with the "finite" material world? I'm wondering if this could be part of an idea as to what Information is. Information could be the interthreading that allows the tangible and intangible to associate with one another.