Guest guest Posted November 1, 1999 Report Share Posted November 1, 1999 >From recent commentary by Prof V Krishnamurti snip <<There is a beautiful analogy from the mathematical world for this. There are several levels of infinity in Mathematics. The lowest level of infinity is that of the set of numbers 1,2,3, ... . A higher (larger) level of infinity is that of all points on any line segment. It is a difficult proposition to decide whether this higher level is really the next higher level or whether there is another level of infinity in between. That there is no such intermediate level was conjectured for long. In the thirties Godel proved that this conjecture cannot be disproved. In the sixties Cohen proved that it cannot also be proved. Thus this conjecture has got the famous stature of an 'undecidable' proposition in Mathematics.This undecidability is the status of mAyA in vedanta.>> Response from Jay It is not only the in-between concept of middle infinities that reflect concepts of Maya but the whole idea of infinite at any level that reflects the concept of Maya in Vedanta. The idea of infinity itself is very difficult to come to terms with. Godels incompleteness theorem is perhaps his best contribution to mathematics. In simple terms it says "Mathematics cannot prove mathematics". All this arises due to infinity. We may feel that we understand the idea of infinity. Many religions give this quality to the concept of God. Yet when we try to pinpoint it - we get into difficulties. We think it is so simple to grasp and yet it is not. With the natural numbers - infinity arises - you cannot do without it. You cannot have a cut-off point. With the concept of all points in a line or on a plane infinity arises within the finite!! When I talk at senior schools about the role of spirituality - I have great fun when I bring in the concept of infinity. I say without infinity mathematics will collapse and yet you cannot really make sense of it in finite terms (it defies the laws of finite). I tell them "A prophet who sees God has the same problem - he cannot explain this God in finite terms but is quite sure of Him." jay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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