I have a fairly fundamental question. What is the difference between infinity as shown by the aleph numbers and the infinity we see in algebra and calculus?
Are they interchangeable/transposable in any way? For example, could you describe the infinity of a limit with an aleph number? Does it have cardinality?
Thank you.
Mathematical objects that are called "numbers" are usually representatives for some amount, and we want to say that it is the amount that matters.
For example, if I cut a meter long stick into two equal pieces, each of them will be exactly as long exactly as putting five $10$ cm rulers one after another. It is not the object but rather the length which plays along.
The real line's infinity: Nonnegative real numbers can be thought as abstract notion of length, while negative numbers can be thought of as either "making things shorter" or as formal objects to allow additive inverses.
The infinity on the real line represents an abstract notion of "being longer than any other length". You can think of it formally as being larger than any finite length: something has "infinite" length if it is longer than an object of length $1$, an object of length $2$, and so on.
It is important to remember that this is just a formal symbol, that $\infty$ is added to $\mathbb R$ to say "If you reached this point - you've gone too far".
When we say: $$\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{x^n}{e^n} = 0$$
It may contradict my previous statement, since those are both "infinite" numbers. However in this limit we compute the behavior of the ratios when taking bigger and bigger "lengths".
The story of $\aleph$: On the other hand we have cardinal numbers. These are numbers which measure the most primitive notion of size, namely "how many oranges are in this pile?". In finite numbers the notions coincide, $10$ oranges can be used to measure a $10$ foot distance. However when talking about an infinite number of oranges the rules of the game change - as they usually do with infinite objects.
The idea behind the aleph numbers is to measure how many oranges are in some pile, or how many cats are in the bag. Now it does not matter if your bag says "Natural numbers" or "Integers" or any other countable set. It means just that there are $\aleph_0$ many elements in the set.
Of course, $\aleph_0$ is the size of the set which has more elements than any finite set. Much like the $\infty$ idea is the length beyond all finite lengths. However the $\aleph$ numbers have a very accurate definition, they do not rely on some limit but rather on a precise definition. Their existence is deduced from the axioms which assert their existence, unlike $\pm\infty$ which is often added to $\mathbb R$ as formal symbols to signify "the end of the line".
This makes the two notions of infinity very different. If we could compare $\infty$ and $\aleph_0$ and $2^{\aleph_0}$ (the latter being the cardinality of the continuum) we can notice several things:
To "reach" $\infty$ we need only to take countably many steps, that is $\lim\limits_{n\to\infty}\ n$; however we pass over $2^{\aleph_0}$ many elements.
On the other hand, to reach the size of $\aleph_0$ we cannot pass over more than countably many elements. If we skip over uncountably many elements then we have uncountably many elements, that is more than just $\aleph_0$ many of them.
In contrast, again, even if we do take a countable collection of countable piles we cannot "reach" the continuum. In that sense, in order to meet the continuum (while increasing cardinality because this is what we measure) we have to take uncountably many steps, this is regardless to its actual value as a cardinal number - it can never be the countable union of strictly smaller cardinalities.
To conclude, there are several notions of "number" in mathematics, they all have about one thing in common: they give us some "measurements" on mathematical objects; however some of them behave very differently from one another. There is no need to expect there will be a single notion of infinity either, and there is not just one notion. There are many. However all infinities have one thing in common: they are always "larger than any finite measurement".
Some reading material on this site: