Talk:Limit

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Good change, Fred. Sometimes a "See" is better than a REDIRECT. --Ed Poor


I removed this altogether too quirky "general-purpose" definition of "limit":

A Limit is a basic process which both in nature and in designed processes sets the bounds of a phenomenon or indeed anything.

Because it basically just amounts to "Camus said something or other about limits", and thus does not meet a minimum threshold for usefulness, I've moved the following to a talk page, in particular Talk:Albert Camus:

Albert Camus wrote about the philosophical concept of limit especially as it plays out in politics.

After this, there was nothing left on this page but a mathematical definition, so I changed the page to a redirect.

--Ryguasu 11:33 Nov 25, 2002 (UTC)

Limit in the infinity[edit]

Infinity represents the unlimited medium in which observers can create plurality of units, either identical (space) or each unit different, (time). Magnitude, manifested as space or time, has nothing to do with the infinite medium, apart from accommodating it, because magnitude arises out of the observation of the created units. It is the observer who creates this reality in the static medium of infinity. He does it by creating basic organization in the infinite medium and then by placing the limit in some position of that basic organization. 92.24.37.44. Every unit is the result of limitation of the infinite medium. The limit is the boundary between inside-outside, between existence-non existence and between the observer and that which he observes. By creating a unit, out of and in the infinite medium, the observer becomes conscious of his own existence in the 'now'. His consciousness allows him to observe, by comparison, other independent units. Being unlimited the medium gives the observer complete freedom of creating and observing various realities. KK (78.146.62.42 (talk) 13:55, 15 January 2012 (UTC))[reply]