I agree that there's no smallest positive number. PROOF:
Assume there *IS* a smallest positive number.
A positive number divided by a positive number is still a positive number.
Divide the smallest number by 2... it's now half the original size. But wait... it it's half the original size, then it's smaller than the smallest positive number. Since it's also positive, it leads to a contradiction. Therefore, the assumption must be false.
WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT????
Originally posted by: Anubis
you know i didnt read that HUGE other thread but we proved this in college, so i dont see what the big issue is
Originally posted by: malak
Originally posted by: DanTMWTMP
whoever thinks that 0.9999... does not equal 1 is a total dumbass.
It's not about philosophy or anything. This is straight up math. 0.9999infinity = 1. end of discussion.
Mathmatically it's not possible. One day you will learn. Just like in elementary school they told you that the square root of a negative number isn't possible and then later they tell you it is, later they will tell you technically .99R does not equal 1.
there's this whole thing called a number system that just so happens to perfectly relate to the "real world" down the the sub-atomic level, I suggest you study it and learn what it means.Originally posted by: RelaxTheMind
1 - .9999~ = .0000~1
Prove it wrong.
if you can explain it with a magic number i can explain it with a magic number. why would my number exist and not your .9999~
in theory .9999~ = 1 but in the real world where people already have an idea of what 1 is... 1=1 and .9999 = .9999
or else life would act much like this dammed thread.
Originally posted by: RelaxTheMind
1 - .9999~ = .0000~1
Prove it wrong.
if you can explain it with a magic number i can explain it with a magic number. why would my number exist and not your .9999~
in theory .9999~ = 1 but in the real world where people already have an idea of what 1 is... 1=1 and .9999 = .9999
or else life would act much like this dammed thread.
Nobody is saying 0.99 (with a set amount of 9s) is equal to 1, they're saying 0.9 with an infinite number of 9s is equal to 1.Originally posted by: sheik124
Originally posted by: RelaxTheMind
1 - .9999~ = .0000~1
Prove it wrong.
if you can explain it with a magic number i can explain it with a magic number. why would my number exist and not your .9999~
in theory .9999~ = 1 but in the real world where people already have an idea of what 1 is... 1=1 and .9999 = .9999
or else life would act much like this dammed thread.
I was just about to post that
1=1 ; .999~1=.999~1
If you have .9 repeating for a set amount of 9's, make that N, then if you have N-1 0's (after a decimal point of course) followed by a 1, that makes 1, but .999~1 cannot be 1, it can be rounded to 1, because nobody gives a shiite about .0000000000000001, it won't make a difference, but it is still .999~1, only way to change it is by adding .001~1 to it.
Originally posted by: RelaxTheMind
1 - .9999~ = .0000~1
Prove it wrong.
if you can explain it with a magic number i can explain it with a magic number. why would my number exist and not your .9999~
in theory .9999~ = 1 but in the real world where people already have an idea of what 1 is... 1=1 and .9999 = .9999
or else life would act much like this dammed thread.
yes I know, I thought I'd confuse people if I said ~-1 0's followed by a one.Originally posted by: Howard
Nobody is saying 0.99 (with a set amount of 9s) is equal to 1, they're saying 0.9 with an infinite number of 9s is equal to 1.Originally posted by: sheik124
Originally posted by: RelaxTheMind
1 - .9999~ = .0000~1
Prove it wrong.
if you can explain it with a magic number i can explain it with a magic number. why would my number exist and not your .9999~
in theory .9999~ = 1 but in the real world where people already have an idea of what 1 is... 1=1 and .9999 = .9999
or else life would act much like this dammed thread.
I was just about to post that
1=1 ; .999~1=.999~1
If you have .9 repeating for a set amount of 9's, make that N, then if you have N-1 0's (after a decimal point of course) followed by a 1, that makes 1, but .999~1 cannot be 1, it can be rounded to 1, because nobody gives a shiite about .0000000000000001, it won't make a difference, but it is still .999~1, only way to change it is by adding .001~1 to it.
Originally posted by: ugopk
I don't think this would work.
Because if you can do it with 1 and .99..., you can do the same proof for .99 and .98 and so on...
basically saying all numbers = all numbers![]()
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ugopk
I don't think this would work.
Because if you can do it with 1 and .99..., you can do the same proof for .99 and .98 and so on...
basically saying all numbers = all numbers![]()
you're making exactly no sense
.999...8 is not a number just like .000...1 is not a number (note the '...'s represent an INFINITE amount of numbers)
Originally posted by: Bacardi151
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ugopk
I don't think this would work.
Because if you can do it with 1 and .99..., you can do the same proof for .99 and .98 and so on...
basically saying all numbers = all numbers![]()
you're making exactly no sense
.999...8 is not a number just like .000...1 is not a number (note the '...'s represent an INFINITE amount of numbers)
you're the one who's not making any sense, if '...' represents an infinite amount of numbers, how can you have a 1 at the end? that means the amount of numbers in between .000...1 is not infinite, and what comes after 1? do you even know what the concept of infinite is? you can't add a number to infinite, which you did by saying infinite and then putting a 1 at the end of the infinite series of #s
Originally posted by: GTPoompt
this comes up all the time in every forum, but i haven't ever commented.
lim 1/x -> 0 as x -> infinity = 0. so then ok, 1/infinity = 0 because you can't have .000000 ..... 1 because 0's are infinite.
but then 1 = infinity * 0? it doesn't follow that basic rule of divison. infinity * 0 is an indeterminate form.
Both answers are correct. But don't say the mathematical one is more correct because math was created by logic to explain things.
Can anyone clarify 0 * infinity is indeterminate? It COULD be undefined but I am not sure.
another thing, why would 1/infinity be the smallest number? why wouldn't (1/A)^(A) / ((A)^(A))? but remember 1/A is indeterminate and A^A is also indeterminate. If A^A is indeterminate then 1/A must be indeterminate. this is where A -> infinity.