Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: dornick
You're completely correct up until that last sentence. What do you mean by fallen short?
Have you taken calculus yet? Back in the day, my reasoning was identical to yours, until I took calculus and realized I was wrong. If you haven't gotten there, trust us and you'll seeIf you still won't let it go, I recommend that Dr. Math link I put in my edit.
I'm saying that a given number will always be smaller than a number that has a larger value in the previous (leftward) placeholder.
Some fields in math must go an an assumption. Otherwise they won't work. They may be right 99.999R% of the time but they won't be right 100% of the time. Take Newtonian physics for example. Nobody would have thought that as you increase in speed the laws of physics can begin to follow other principles. But Einstein formulated that as you approach the speed of light, you gain mass.
The assumptions that form the basis of math are far from saying certain repeating decimals are equal to whole numbers, that sort of stuff is proven. And your physics comment is irrelevant. Physics uses math to describe our universe. Because it can give an inaccurate description at times doesn't mean the math is wrong.
btw, since you didn't answer my question about calculus, I'm going to assume you haven't taken it and therefore you aren't exactly qualified to be trying to overthrow parts of math.