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Qualitative infinity

TheMadFool September 15, 2017 at 04:17 8825 views 25 comments
The notion of infinity is inseparable from numbers (quantity). At least that's what I think. In fact infinity is defined in terms of numbers, as in it's the process of counting without end. Take any issue where infinity is involved and you'll see that numbers e.g. space and time.

Well, what of qualitative infinity? By that I mean a non-numerical type of infinity. Take for instance love. We do talk of infinite love of God. What does such a statement, ''infinite love'', mean? It's not quantified but that doesn't mean it can't be. To give an example, pain is regularly quantified in medicine, albeit imperfectly. Nevertheless quantification it is.

Some find numbering of love abhorrent. Yet, contrary to their attitude, they invariably love someone more/less than another, which is quantifaction.

So, it seems that infinity doesn't make sense without numbers.

Do any of you know of qualitative infinity? A non-numerical infinity? Does this even make sense?

Comments (25)

BlueBanana September 15, 2017 at 04:54 #104822
The problem is anything can be quantified. Find something that can't, and when we define it as infinite, voilà.
TheMadFool September 15, 2017 at 07:02 #104852
Reply to BlueBanana I just thought of something. Non-quantitative comparisons do exist. For example, when a woman chooses her clothes, she asks ''which is better?'' Another example would be when a woman chooses among potential partners, she asks ''who loves me more?''

The examples above suggest non-numerical comparisons and in these instances, I think, qualitative infinity can be found.

How would we define infinity qualitatively?

In the case of love, it could mean willingness to give one's life for someone/something. Perhaps, something even greater like loving without expectations. Perhaps, subjectivity, being an important part in the domain of emotions, the definition of infinite love or courage or fear will differ from person to person. Yet, it seems there does exist qualitative infinity.

How would you define qualitative infinity? Is it subjective and so exists only as private meaning or is there an objective definition?
BlueBanana September 15, 2017 at 09:42 #104883
Quoting TheMadFool
The examples above suggest non-numerical comparisons and in these instances, I think, qualitative infinity can be found.


Do they? The comparison suggests they can be measured so the infinity is quantitative.
TheMadFool September 15, 2017 at 10:14 #104889
Quoting BlueBanana
Do they? The comparison suggests they can be measured so the infinity is quantitative.


Don't they?

How does a woman/man judge the love of two competing suitors? As far as I know, numbers aren't involved. I don't know how the system works but one way to evaluate love would be to set up a test - very common in folktales. These tests aren't quantitative tests. Rather, they're qualitative e.g. x did this for me and y didn't and so x loves me more.

I think the use of quantitative terms such as ''less'' and ''more'' obscures the qualitative nature of such comparisons. Nevertheless, there is a difference between love and, say, height or weight. The former is qualitative and the latter is quantitative. So, it's reasonable to look for a qualitative infinity. Is this a category error? No, it isn't because comparison includes the distinctions less and more and where such distinctions exist it's not odd to ask for the unlimited or, in other words, the infinite.
sime September 15, 2017 at 10:25 #104891
I think the average Platonist subjectively identifies Infinity with the feeling of exhilaration they experience when imagining the beginning of a sequence of successively larger sets without an apparent limit.

This explains their resentment when a finitist says that infinity isn't real because it isn't constructable via counting. They interpret the finitist as denying them a rush.


Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 15:08 #104958
Any number can be defined as a categorical (aka qualitative) term, even infinity.
CasKev September 15, 2017 at 15:20 #104961
What about the color spectrum? Could it not be infinitely subdivided? That is, between two shades of color, there will always be a shade that is between them.
Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 15:36 #104965
Quoting BlueBanana
Do they? The comparison suggests they can be measured so the infinity is quantitative.


That is not how quantitative works and there can be categorical comparisons.

Example:

"How I thought that movie was great! What did you think?"

"I thought it sucked."

There is a reason we have labels such as qualitative and quantitative, because not everything can be measured on an interval scale. Don't let the fact that numbers are involved confuse you on the difference between the two.

Take the president's approval ratings. That is not a quantitative measurement of how well the president is doing, is a proportional measurement of the opinions of how people feel the president is doing, which is a categorical response (aka qualitative). Getting the two confused is a common mistake, but it is important to understand the differences. There is no ruler we can take out to measure the way people feel about the president. We can say this many people feel this way, and that many people feel this way, but we cannot actually measure their feelings about the president and compare them on either an interval or ordinal scale. We can only say this many people feel this way, and that many people feel that way, which is categories.
Srap Tasmaner September 15, 2017 at 15:51 #104968
Reply to Jeremiah
But doesn't classifying or categorizing things presuppose the possibility of counting them? The qualitative and quantitative are different, yes, but you can't have one without the other.
mcdoodle September 15, 2017 at 17:51 #104992
Quoting TheMadFool
Do any of you know of qualitative infinity? A non-numerical infinity? Does this even make sense?


Part of my summer reading has been Levinas' 'Totality and infinity'. You might care to give him a try if you are interested.

Levinas takes the face-to-face encounter with the Other as one of irredeemable separation. We transcend the finite and potentially enter the infinite through our relations with Otherness - other people, the otherness of the world, the other in ourselves.

My interpretation is that this is contrasted with a 'totalising' view which constantly identifies forms of sameness. Such views, like the view of a scientiser for instance, believe that all is knowable by this method of totalising, of systematising. All can be numbered.

By contrast the I-you encounter isn't bounded. Through dialogical language we can express something of this infinity.

For Levinas personally this leads to religious conclusions: after a tough war in which he was imprisoned as German POW and many of his family were murdered, he returned to Jewish religion.

But it need not be religious. For Levinas it was a long-term response to Heidegger, who had influenced him deeply in his early days as a philosopher, a way of adapting a phenomenological approach to understanding without going the way of Sartre.

Personally I accept the profound insight, albeit re-interpreted in my own terms: qualitative infinity makes excellent sense. To be confined to the quantitative is to deny the profundity of experience, which is in and of a boundless world that we constantly strive to make boundaries in, in order to understand it.
mcdoodle September 15, 2017 at 17:53 #104993
Reply to TheMadFool
William Blake:To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour
Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 21:19 #105010
Reply to Srap Tasmaner

Simply because you arbitrarily assigned numbers to groups or the elements in those groups that does not mean the observations themselves are quantitative observations.

What I think is going on here, is not philosophy, but a general misunderstanding of what these terms mean. Pick up a intro to statistics book and start reading.
Srap Tasmaner September 15, 2017 at 21:30 #105014
Reply to Jeremiah
I think there's a misunderstanding here.

I wasn't claiming that, to take your example, people can simply be pegged to a spot on some approval scale. I was saying that part of classifying their qualitative judgments as "approve" or "disapprove", say, is that we can count them -- four approve, six disapprove. Predicates need quantifiers. Seven say this tastes good, nineteen say it doesn't.
Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 22:23 #105020
Quoting Srap Tasmaner
I wasn't claiming that, to take your example, people can simply be pegged to a spot on some approval scale. I was saying that part of classifying their qualitative judgments as "approve" or "disapprove", say, is that we can count them -- four approve, six disapprove


You are not even looking at the variable of interest any more. You are looking at the proportion and not the observation, you can't pull our a ruler and measure how someone feels about the color blue. You can count how many people like blue, and how many don't like blue, but now you are summing something different. You can say this group is bigger than that group, but now you are looking at the number of people in a group and not their feelings towards blue. The variable of interest is categorical; quantitative does not means that there are numbers within proximity.


**And there was no misunderstanding, I just didn't want to waste my time explaining something so basic to you.


Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 22:28 #105021
I got this crazy idea, instead of debating the difference between the two here in this thread, how about people get a book from a reliable source and read it. I know that not making stuff up off the top of your head is a new concept for "philosophers", but I think it is just crazy enough to work.
Srap Tasmaner September 15, 2017 at 23:17 #105022
Quoting Jeremiah
You are not even looking at the variable of interest any more.


That's a fair point. In responding I conflated two different acts of categorizing. I ended up talking about counting acts of categorizing, which wasn't helpful.

Back to the question at hand, what do you make of the fact that people do arrange their qualitative judgments comparatively? For instance, with your movie example: people say things like, "It wasn't as bad as the third Batman movie, but it was pretty bad." "Hires root beer is okay, but I'd rather have A&W", etc.
Jeremiah September 15, 2017 at 23:59 #105023
Reply to Srap Tasmaner

There is no meaningful measurement there; I can't say the 2nd Batman is 5 meters better than the 3rd Batman, as that would be gibberish. There is no way to measure how much better 2 is than 3.

The ranking being used is arbitrary. I could rank Batman 3 as a 5 out 5, but what does that mean? Is it good? Is it bad? I could rank them A to F, I could even rank them fish to pizza. They are only labels.


I think we need to clear up what these terms actually mean:

Quantitative is numerical measurements that have meaningful units.

Categorical, is categories or labels.

Jeremiah September 16, 2017 at 00:03 #105024
Quoting TheMadFool
The notion of infinity is inseparable from numbers (quantity)


When was the last time you or any one measured an infinite quantity?
BC September 16, 2017 at 00:29 #105026
Reply to TheMadFool How about the grammatical "infinite comparison": "This is better."

The qualifying infinite may be used in various ways.

Give me something to drink.
Give me a chair to sit.
It was a sight to see.
This is a thing to admire.
2) to qualify a verb like an adverb

I came to see you.
We are going to play the match.
It is going to rain.
3) to qualify an adjective like an adverb

The book is nice to read.
This picture is beautiful to look at.
4) to qualify a sentence

To tell the truth, you are a fool.
To be frank, I don’t like him.
Srap Tasmaner September 16, 2017 at 00:44 #105029
Reply to Jeremiah
Say you're a movie critic, and at the end of the year you publish a top-ten list. It's natural to attach numbers to the list precisely because to you the list is already well-ordered under the relation "better than".

There's a sort of implicit "unit of preference" here, but that's less important than being able to order the set.
Jeremiah September 16, 2017 at 00:56 #105030
Reply to Srap Tasmaner

It does not matter that you are using numbers, it is still an arbitrary ranking with labels. You need to ditch this idea that quantitative = numbers, because it is more than that. Gradations of your personal and subjective "likes" is not quantitative, as it is not an intersubjectively verifiable numerical measurement with meaningful units.

Srap Tasmaner September 16, 2017 at 01:18 #105031
Quoting Jeremiah
Gradations of your personal and subjective "likes" is not quantitative, as it is not an intersubjectively verifiable numerical measurement with meaningful units.


Well what we'd look for if we did want to head down this road is behavior.

For example, there's Ramsey's famous suggestion about how to measure degree of belief. Suppose you're walking from one town to the next and come to a fork. You're not certain which is the correct way, but you think it's to the right. Now suppose you see a farmer out in a field. How far would you be willing to walk to ask him if you're going the right way? The more confident you are you're going the right way, the shorter that distance, and vice versa.

If you say like A&W better than Hires, we'd expect you to buy A&W more often, be willing to pay a little more for it, drive a little further to a store that carries it if you have to. How much further? How much more are you willing to pay?
Jeremiah September 16, 2017 at 01:42 #105032
Reply to Srap Tasmaner

Sorry, but I lost interest.
TheMadFool September 16, 2017 at 04:04 #105042
Reply to sime Yes, discussions on quality invariably leads to emotions. Is it because we've quantified almost everything else? I don't know.

Quoting Jeremiah
Any number can be defined as a categorical (aka qualitative) term, even infinity.


Can you clarify.

Reply to mcdoodle (Y)
Jeremiah September 16, 2017 at 04:12 #105044
Quoting TheMadFool
Can you clarify.


Already did.