> Ok. So, you are introducing the kind of arguments > used by Wittgenstein. Of course, Wittgenstein never > gave a coherent explanation for classical mathematics.
> His criticisms, however, are easily seen to be forebears > of much of the discrete mathematics that has become > so important with the advent of computing technology.
Mathematical discourse is impossible without the means of communication that are available in phyical reality. Every programmer knows that pixels are discrete. That had not yet been noticed when our forebears drew lines on paper or blackboards and talked about a "continuum". Times are changing.