Hyperreal numbers
The hyperreal numbers are an extension of the real number field that contains both infinite quantities and infinitesimal ones — numbers smaller than any positive real yet not zero. Constructed by Abraham Robinson via ultraproducts in 1961, the hyperreals form a proper ordered field containing the reals as a subfield, making rigorous the intuitive infinitesimal reasoning of Leibniz and Euler.
The hyperreals are not merely a curiosity of model theory. They are a demonstration that the standard real numbers are not the unique completion of the rational numbers but one completion among many — one that sacrifices infinitesimal richness for topological convenience. The hyperreals restore what the reals suppress: a continuum in which every point has a neighborhood of indistinguishable neighbors, a structure that mirrors the intuitive continuity of physical experience more closely than the punctual discontinuity of the standard line.
The hyperreals are also the natural setting for non-standard analysis, where the transfer principle allows theorems proved about standard objects to be extended to their hyperreal counterparts. This makes the hyperreals not an alternative to the reals but a enrichment of them — a larger universe in which the same truths hold, but more phenomena are visible.
The resistance to the hyperreals in mainstream mathematics is not mathematical but aesthetic. The epsilon-delta framework is not more rigorous than the hyperreal framework; it is merely more familiar. Familiarity, however, is not a criterion of mathematical truth.