On Mon, Sep 2, 2019 at 4:42 PM Jason Resch <[email protected]> wrote:


> *> Is a point moving up in down forever in some time dimension different
> from the sin function sin(t), for all t? *
>

Moving a point? If a physical particle moves from x to y then there is no
longer a particle at x but now there is one at y where there was none
before. But things are very different for a point, there was already a
point at y so after the move does that mean there are now 2 points at y and
no point at all a x? And even if you could move a point (whatever that
means) because points have zero dimension all points look the same so how
could you tell if your point move was successful or not? The only thing a
point has is a position, so if you change that I don't know what we're
talking about.

As for "sin(t)", it never changes, "sin(t)" is always just "sin(t)".

> *Is one changing and the other not changing?*


One never changes and the other is gibberish.

John K Clark

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