[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:
It would not be a bad definition of math to call it the study of terms that have precise meanings.
Yes but it doesn't matter. The moon can't literally be in your mind either. Since your mind is in your brain, then if the moon were in your mind it would be in your brain, and I don't even know what would happen first: your brain would be crushed against your skull (which would in turn explode), and the weight of the moon would crush you flat (and also destroy whatever continent you were on and then very possibly the whole world).
But you can still think about the moon without it literally having to be in your mind.
Same with infinity.
I can visualize the moon. If I say the word "moon," and you get a picture of the moon in your mind - or some such thing - then I feel like we're on the same page. But I can't visualize "infinity," or when I do it turns out as above. If I say the word "infinity" and you visualize (or taste, or whatever) something similar, I feel like we've communicated, but then you would agree with my first line in the above post. Since you don't agree, when I say "infinity," you must get some very different representation in your mi... (read more)