THE WORLDS OF INFINITIES
To see the world ∈a grain of sand, And a heaven ∈a wildflower; Hold infinity ∈ the palm of you hand, And eternity ∈ an hour. – William Blake
[1] Infinity has stimulated imaginations for thousands of years. It is an idea drawn upon by theologians, poets, artists, philosophers,
writers, scientists, mathematicians – an idea that has perplexed and intrigued – an idea that remains illusive. Infinity has taken on
different identities ∈ different fields of thought. In early times, the idea of infinity was, rightly or wrongly, linked to large numbers.
People of antiquity experienced a feeling of the infinite by gazing at stars and planets or at grains of sand on a beach. Ancient
[5] philosophers and mathematicians such as Zeno, Anaxagoras, Democritus, Aristotle, Archimedes pondered, posed and argued the
ideas that infinity presented.
Aristotle proposed the ideas of potential and actual infinities. He argued that only potential infinity existed.
In The Sand Reckoner Archimedes dispelled the idea that the number of grains of sand on a beach are infinite by actually determining
a method for calculating the number on all the beaches of the earth.
[10] Infinity has been the culprit ∈ many paradoxes. Zeno’s paradoxes of Achilles and the tortoise and the Dichotomy have perplexed
readers for centuries. Galileo’s paradoxes dealing with segments, points, and infinite sets should also be noted.
The list of mathematicians with their discoveries and uses or misuses of infinity extends through the centuries. (…).
Texto adaptado de PAPPAS, T. ―The Magic of Mathematics: Discovering the Spell of Mathematics‖, 1994.
Segundo o texto, a ideia de infinito