You're pointing to a concept represented in your brain, using a label which you expect will evoke analogous representations of that concept in readers' brains, and asserting that that thing is not something that a human brain could represent.
The various mathematical uses of infinity (infinite cardinals, infinity as a limit in calculus, infinities in nonstandard analysis, etc.) are all well-defined and can be stored as information-bearing concepts in human brains. I don't think there's any problem here.
You're pointing to a concept represented in your brain, using a label which you expect will evoke analogous representations of that concept in readers' brains, and asserting that that thing is not something that a human brain could represent.
It looks like we agree but you either misread or I was unclear:
I'm not asserting that the definition of infinity I mentioned at the beginning ("a number that is big enough for its smallness to be negligible for the purpose at hand") is not something a human brain could represent. I'm saying that if the spe...
[edit: sorry, the formatting of links and italics in this is all screwy. I've tried editing both the rich-text and the HTML and either way it looks ok while i'm editing it but the formatted terms either come out with no surrounding spaces or two surrounding spaces]
In the latest Rationality Quotes thread, CronoDAS quoted Paul Graham: