So I must delude myself?
I must pretend that if I took a pen to paper I can add infinitely many numbers together?
If that were true why don't you just do it? Why do you keep writing "..."?
How about we replace the axiom of infinity with the axiom of no-self-delusion?
Suddenly the "..." in mathematical notation becomes an honest acknowledgment of ongoing process rather than a hand-wave toward a completed infinity.
Of course, you have to give up the ontological view of Mathematics for a process ontology. But so what?
You lose nothing of mathematical power and you gain something so much richer.
I have no problem with the traversing part.
I also have no problem with traversing more; or traversing slower e.g when traversing from 0 to 1 in N there's not much scenery, but in R there is.
I have a problem with coming to an end part.
I don't believe you. Now that you have finished defining an infinite object.
Constructive mathematics is nothing but an outrage at time-complexity blindness.
What we have is *ONLY* potential infinities. That's just co-induction and co-recursion + lazy evaluation.
We have co-data types - unfoldable structures rather than completed collections.
We have co-algebras.
You can work with infinite sets that admit algorithmic exploration - where "exhaustive search" means "my process will eventually find any element that exists," not "my process will finish examining all elements."
This gives you the mathematical power you need while avoiding the metaphysical baggage of completed infinities.
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/4276587
The infinity is in the potential of the search process, not in any completed collection being searched.
This much more intellectually and philosophically satisfying than deluding myself about completing infinite tasks.