06-25-2011, 01:06 AM
(06-25-2011, 01:03 AM)Raman Wrote:(06-25-2011, 12:19 AM)unity100 Wrote:(06-24-2011, 11:45 PM)Raman Wrote: Infinity is one. Anything other than one is not infinity, but it is included in it. Including subsets of infinities, including nothingness.
how can you attribute any specific adjective/quantifier to infinity whereas nothing is applicable ?
'one' is such a quantifier/adjective.
Infinity exists. It has to be only one. It just coincides with the concept "one"...it is not a regular definition. If infinity is not one it cannot exist. It becomes manyness with is included in one (as infinity). The alpha is the omega, Paradoxically it includes subsets of infinite infinities.
the concept 'one' is just a concept/entity in infinity itself.
if it coincided with 'one', infinity could be described as one -> then, it wouldnt be infinite. if it didnt equally contain the counterpart of the one -> the many, then infinity would not be infinite.
'existing' is also a concept that is found in infinity. if infinity can be summarized as existing, it will not be infinite anymore, because it wont equally contain the counterpart of existing - non-existing.
therefore as such, infinity is the 'mystery' that cannot be dubbed with anything -> that includes the concept mystery.