disappoint
Lifer
- Dec 7, 2009
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The negative natural numbers are an infinite set that "end" at -1.
Whoops. How'd that happen?
lol end at -1. Where did they start?
The negative natural numbers are an infinite set that "end" at -1.
Whoops. How'd that happen?
lol end at -1. Where did they start?
How did it "end" at -1? I thought infinite sets were "never ending"? Is that true of the ordered set of negative natural numbers?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-I6XTVZXww
I can buy that S=1-1+1-1..... equals 1/2 but is there something in math that says you can shift one of the equations over one digit when adding to equations together? To me that seems where the flaw in this is. Maybe it is perfectly 'legal'. Can someone explain how if it is?
and no, infinity is NOT a constant. a constant means that the value means the same thing everywhere. if that were the case, then infinity/infinity would equal 1, and it doesn't. it equals infinity, as that link i pasted shows.
Well, the guy says right off the bat that he had to change the definition of infinity to make this whole thing work so that should have told you something.
The value of 1-1+1-1... is undefined. It's like taking the square root of -1. You can talk about it, but you can't calculate it.
Changing the value to 0.5 may be useful in physics, but not in math. To everyone else, it's just a thought exercise.
The link you pasted says it's undefined. You didn't read your own link.![]()
You don't get to ignore my question and then demand I answer yours.What happened? Your brain froze trying to answer the question?
What difference does that make?If they end at -1 then where do they start?
The point is that sets don't "end" or "start" whether they are finite or infinite. I repeat myself thusly, and like so...I'm not saying they end at -1.
Sets are not processes. They are objects. It's that simple.
Where does the number 7 start? Where does it end?You are. In your imaginary little world where they do, where would they start?
It absolutely matters that the set is infinite. That's what the math shows. You're basically just stating that it's impossible to draw the hypotenuse of an isoceles right triangle because the value of sqrt2 is irrational.Might be helpful to look at a physical real world example of this. Think of {1,-1+1-1...} as a square wave. It doesn't even matter if it ends. Will that square wave be exactly the same as a DC waveform that's constantly 0.5 for the same duration? Nope nope nope nope nope.
You haven't represented the math in the real world, and you clearly do not understand the meaning of infinity.So they're not the same in the real world. In this universe.
If it were that simple it wouldn't even be a theory.So did they just prove that String Theory doesn't describe this universe?:sneaky:
^Sounds like a politician doing math^
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I didn't reject it, I refuted it. That is to say, I demonstrated it to be irrational.I gave a rational argument. You rejected it. Now I laugh at you.
Is this your "bicycle"? What's the point?
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Might be helpful to look at a physical real world example of this. Think of {1,-1+1-1...} as a square wave.
A square wave is a finite set of discrete elements with finite duration. Not infinite.
Like I said, good for physics, bad for math.
I didn't reject it, I refuted it. That is to say, I demonstrated it to be irrational.
So, no you did not give any rational argument, and you still haven't, and you won't, because one does not exist.
You're posting puerile images in an academic discussion and simultaneously expect me to believe you give a single fuck about "the point"? You're dumber than I thought.
They didn't "stop the set somewhere." They summed it.The point was, even in the real world, {1,-1,+1,-1...} is not the same as 0.5, even if you did "stop the set somewhere" like they did.
No, they simply are not, and ample reasons have been given to establish that. You're simply gainsaying the mathematical proofs because you're a dumbass.Which btw you aren't supposed to do with an infinite set. The posters above that said it does not converge into a single value but is undefined and divergent are correct.
Math doesn't have anything to do with physics.My point was that it's bad for math and physics.
Your puerile arguments reminded me of some puerile images. Puerile in puerile out. You get what you give.
Math doesn't have anything to do with physics.
This oughta be good.You write with a fat crayon don't you?
The point was, even in the real world, {1,-1,+1,-1...} is not the same as 0.5, even if you did "stop the set somewhere" like they did. Which btw you aren't supposed to do with an infinite set. The posters above that said it does not converge into a single value but is undefined and divergent are correct.
My point was that it's bad for math and physics.
They can be filtered to look the same at infinity.
True square waves are bad anyways due to all the harmonics.![]()
This oughta be good.
Please, explain what math has to do with physics. You've got no shortage of disagreements in this thread, but a complete dearth of arguments.
Put up or shut up time, dumbass.