ponyfool
Well-known member
The airplane/treadmill thing got me reflecting on many of my science and math classes and some of the questions asked, and I remembered this one. The mathematical answer differs from others.
Is physical movement actually possible?
The instinct is to immediately say, of course. But, think about it mathematically. We know from our math classes that in order to get from point A to point B, you have to cross midpoint C. To get from point A to midpoint C, you must cross midpoint D, etc.
Well, if every time you go from one point to another, you must cross a midpoint, how can you ever bridge that gap between the originating point to the next midpoint that's always between two points? So, mathematically, based on what we've all been taught, movement isn't possible.
Is physical movement actually possible?
The instinct is to immediately say, of course. But, think about it mathematically. We know from our math classes that in order to get from point A to point B, you have to cross midpoint C. To get from point A to midpoint C, you must cross midpoint D, etc.
Well, if every time you go from one point to another, you must cross a midpoint, how can you ever bridge that gap between the originating point to the next midpoint that's always between two points? So, mathematically, based on what we've all been taught, movement isn't possible.