On Sunday, December 16, 2018 at 3:29:47 AM UTC-6, scerir wrote:
>
> A *numerus* (literally: "number"*i*) was the term used for a unit of the 
> Roman 
> army <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_army>.. In the Imperial Roman 
> army <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Roman_army> (30 BC – 284 
> AD), it referred to units of barbarian 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbarian> allies who were not integrated 
> into the regular army structure of legions 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_legion> and auxilia 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auxiliaries_(Roman_military)>. 
>
> I'm inclined to think that numbers - for there obiectivity - need a good 
> "counter" (somebody or somethink). 
>
> 'I raised just this objection with the (extreme) ultrafinitist Yessenin 
> Volpin during a lecture of his. He asked me to be more specific. I then 
> proceeded to start with 2^1 and asked him whether this is "real" or 
> something to that effect. He virtually immediately said yes. Then I asked 
> about 2^2, and he again said yes, but with a perceptible delay. Then 2^3, 
> and yes, but with more delay. This continued for a couple of more times, 
> till it was obvious how he was handling this objection. Sure, he was 
> prepared to always answer yes, but he was going to take 2^100 times as long 
> to answer yes to 2^100 then he would to answering 2^1. There is no way that 
> I could get very far with this.' -Harvey M. Friedman
>
> Dunno if in each every part of this universe there is a good  "counter". 
> Maybe universe itself, as a whole, is a "counter"?. 
>
>  'Paper in white the floor of the room, and rule it off in one-foot 
> squares. Down on one's hands and knees, write in the first square a set of 
> equations conceived as able to govern the physics of the universe. Think 
> more overnight. Next day put a better set of equations into square two. 
> Invite one's most respected colleagues to contribute to other squares. At 
> the end of these labors, one has worked oneself out into the doorway. Stand 
> up, look back on all those equations, some perhaps more hopeful than 
> others, raise one's finger commandingly, and give the order "*Fly*!" Not 
> one of those equations will put on wings, take off, or fly. *Yet the 
> universe "flies"*.(Wheeler on page 1208 of *Gravitation*)
>
>          
>


In the finitist theory of Jan Mycielski - recounted in the book* 
Understanding the infinite* by Shaughan Lavine 
[ 
https://books.google.com/books/about/Understanding_the_Infinite.html?id=GvGqRYifGpMC
 
] - the process of 2^n+m would have "gaps" in them: 
...,2^500,2^500+1,...2^501,...  etc.

- pt

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