BPSCG said:
I was pointing up the misuse of the word "infinitely". My dictionary says it means "Without bounds or limits; beyond or below assignable limits..." So when someone says something is "infinitely better" than something else, he's saying the gap between them could not be greater. And that's almost never true. A Mercedes-Benz may be a thousand times better than a Yugo, or a jillion skillion times better. But if you say it's "infinitely" better, what do you say when next year's improved M-B comes out?
Your dictionary is mathematically incorrect. As a simple example, the ratio 1/0 evaluates to "infinity" (technically, the value is unbounded as the denominator tends to zero in the limit), which makes 1 "infinitely greater" than 0, but 2 is still greater than 1 (and also "infinitely greater" than 0).
Your mistake is in assuming that infinity is a unique number.
One of the fundamental findings of early 20th century set theory (alluded to earlier) is that infinity itself comes in several different, comparable sizes --- the number of integers is infinite, while the number of real numbers is also infinite, but also provably larger than the number of integers. The number of functions from real numbers to real numbers is also infinite (and larger yet).
However, when we're talking about comparisons between this year's and last year's model, the question is not one of mathematics, but one of assessment. Your definition reads, "beyond or below assignable limits." Depending upon how you choose to measure distances, you can easily have two points, between which the distance measures as "infinite," and then a third point some distance from the second. In a space that obeys the triangle inequality, this third point will also be "infinitely" distance from the first, but still distinct (and possibly even "further" in an intuitive sense) from/than the second.
Mathematically, this isn't a problem because under any sensible definitions, adding any number to an infinite quantitiy still results in an infinite quantity.