Infinity isn’t a number. It's something much weirder.

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Thank you to AnyDesk for supporting PBS. This is a problem that can break the entire idea of infinity. It starts with a vase and

infinitely many numbered balls. (balls falling) Let's start one minute before noon. I put balls one through 10 into the vase. Then I remove ball number one. 30 seconds before noon,

balls 11 through 20 go in and I take ball two out. 15 seconds later, half way to noon. 21 through 30 go in,

ball number three out. We keep going, each step half

as long as the last forever. At exactly noon, after

infinitely many steps of adding 10 balls and removing one, how many balls are in the vase? The answer is infinite… and also zero. Both are correct at the same time. This is a video about how infinity doesn't mean what we think it does and what happens when our

brains try to make sense of more than everything. (music) Hey, smart people, Joe here. How long does it take

for infinity to happen? That question sounds kind of ridiculous, like if you ask ChatGPT

to do a Vsauce impression. I can never do that. But to prove it, just imagine

walking across a room. First you have to cross half the room, then half of what's

left, then half of that. Infinite steps, each step

half as close to the finish, but never there yet. Here I am across the room. This very problem was devised by the Greek philosopher

Zeno 2,500 years ago. He wanted to prove that

motion is impossible, which we know is silly because

it is obviously possible. Look. Zeno was right that there

are infinitely many steps, but he was wrong that they

add up to infinite time. You see, if each step keeps

getting shorter fast enough, infinite things can fit in finite time. Half a minute plus a quarter minute plus an eighth of a minute, so on forever. That adds up to exactly one minute. Infinite steps, finite time. And completing finitely many operations inside of a finite window? That's what mathematicians

call a supertask. You can't do a supertask

with your real human hands, but the mathematics works. And that math forces us to ask some pretty weird questions about how infinity is different

from, you know, non-infinity. When you take supertasks seriously, infinity starts revealing

some deeply strange stuff. Let's say that you run a

hotel with infinite rooms and every single room was occupied. A new guest shows up at the front desk. Instead of telling them no vacancy, just ask the guest in room

one to move to room two, room two to room three, and so on forever. Now, room one is free. The hotel is still completely full, but you've still added a guest. The rooms represent an infinite set. You can add to the whole without changing the size of the hole, and

both are still infinite. This sounds ridiculous, but

this isn't a glitch in the math. So what happens if 10 guests arrive? You don't need to break a sweat, you just get on the intercom. And ask every current

guest to move to the room 10 numbers higher than theirs. Room 1 to 11, room two to room 12, and so on forever down the

hall of infinite rooms. But now rooms one through 10 are empty and all 10 new guests get a bed and the hotel is still completely full just as it was before. So what if an infinite bus

arrives carrying infinite guests? Trickier, but you have

a move for this too. Just ask every current

guest to move to the room that's double their current number. Room one goes to room two. Room two goes to room four. Room three to room six, and so on. Now every odd numbered room in the entire infinite hotel is empty. And since there are

infinitely many odd numbers, every passenger on the

infinite bus gets a room. We fit infinity inside of infinity. Now, let's say inside every

one of those infinite rooms is a lamp. Then one minute before noon,

you flip the switch to on. 30 seconds before noon, lamp off. 15 seconds before noon, on again. The flipping doubles in pace forever. We flip the switch infinite

times before noon arrives. So at exactly noon, is the lamp on or off? There is no right answer, not because we haven't figured it out yet. There literally isn't an answer. When we get to noon, it doesn't

end on, it doesn't end off. It just ends. This is one of the things that

makes supertasks so weird. They can end without a final ending state. Problems like these introduce

ideas that are hard to accept because they don't match our

experience in the real world, but they are still just as

true according to mathematics. Infinity isn't one thing, and some infinities

are bigger than others. The whole numbers go on forever. One, two, three, four, et cetera, and the fractions go on forever too. But we can pair every fraction

to a whole number one to one with nothing left over in either set. So these infinities are the same size, but the decimals don't work that way. There are too many of them

to match these infinities. In the 1870s, mathematician

Georg Cantor proved this, and his argument is an elegant one. Suppose that you claim

to have a complete list of every decimal. This one, this one, and so on. We can attempt to match every

decimal number one for one with every whole number, but I can always find a decimal

that's not on your list. Take the first digit of your

first number and change it. Take the second digit of your

second number and change it. The third digit of the third and so on. the decimal I've built

differs from every number on your list in at least

one digit position. So your complete list of decimals isn't so complete after all. Cantor showed that whatever

infinity you're looking at, you can always construct a larger one. The decimal infinity is bigger than the whole numbered infinity. But there's an infinity

bigger than that one too, and one bigger than that. The ladder of infinities goes up forever. Infinity also breaks arithmetic in a way that honestly kind of bothers me. Take this infinite series. One minus one, plus one, minus

one, plus one, and so on. What does that equal? Well group the terms one

way and you get zero. But start from a different

grouping and you get one. We can even rearrange the

math in a different way. Let's subtract this series from one. Do some basic algebra to rearrange things, and the answer ends up being one half. It's an equally valid answer, but for certain infinite sums, the order that we add things

up changes the result, which brings us back to the vase. This thought experiment

was originally devised by mathematicians John

Littlewood and Sheldon Ross. It's known as the Ross-Littlewood paradox, and it's a paradox because two completely

true lines of reasoning can give us completely opposite answers. Recall that at every step we

add 10 balls and remove one, and each step is done in half as much time as the one before. A net gain each step of nine balls. So after 10 steps, roughly 90 balls. After 100 steps, 900. run that out over infinitely many steps and the number of balls

in the vase is infinity. Then again, maybe the vase is empty. At noon, which balls are in the vase? Let's pick any ball. Ball 47. That went in during step five and it came out again during step 47. Ball one left in step one,

ball 1,000 left in step 1,000. Name any ball that I

can name the exact step when it was removed. So at noon after infinite steps, there is no ball in the vase that wasn't eventually taken out. But suppose instead of removing

the lowest numbered ball, I change which ball I take out each step. Same deal, 10 balls in, one ball out. But now instead of removing

ball one in step one, I remove ball 10. You're the last one that I just added. Step two, balls 11 through

20 go in, ball 11 out. Step 23, ball 21-30 are in. Ball 12 out and so on. Now, which balls are left at noon? Ball 10 was removed in step one. Ball 11 in step two, every subsequent ball gets pulled out in some future step except balls one through nine. Nobody ever touches them. No step exists where they get removed. Exactly nine balls remain at noon. We did the same process at the same rate, 10 in, one out every single step. But by changing which balls I remove, the answer went from

infinity to zero to nine. The vase doesn't have a true answer because the answer is whatever

the process says it is. All of these arguments have sound logic. The secret is that each

scenario in our paradox is actually tracking different things. One watches the size

of the set at each step and then extrapolates forward. The second traces the

fate of individual balls. And the third shifts how we group things to get a totally different answer. In truth, we can't have

an answer for what happens after infinite steps because

there is no final step at all. Asking what's in the vase at noon is like asking what's

north of the North Pole? The question makes grammatical sense, but it doesn't refer to anything real. The Vase and Balls paradox

doesn't really have a solution because the fact that it has

many solutions IS the solution. This is what infinity actually is. Not a very large number, not the number at the end of the number line. I've learned to think of it

as a direction, a process, something that you can approach forever without ever arriving. Treat infinity like a

number and it will fool you. Mathematics can describe what

happens every individual step. It's a beautiful machine

that can take our brains right to the edge and then show us that the edge isn't there. Stay curious. And thank you to AnyDesk

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tailored business plans too. Learn more about AnyDesk. Go to AnyDesk.com/besmart or check out the link in the description. And as always, thank you to everyone who supports the show on Patreon, including these fine folks at our top tier and everyone else who's

part of our community. You help make this show

possible in a very real way. Videos like this take a

lot of resources and time and energy to put together, and we could not do it without you. I am infinitely grateful. See you in the next video. More than everything. Rest of the episode. Paint it out. It will fool you. Don't kick the stool in

the middle of your line. (stool creaking)

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Infinity isn’t a number. It's something much weirder. - Y...