brennan
Argumentative Brit
The result never varies from actually being zero. The interesting thing with 0.999... is that it is changing and what that means. No change: no paradox.
The result never varies from actually being zero. The interesting thing with 0.999... is that it is changing and what that means. No change: no paradox.
Again, so what? That's irrelevant to the argument you've been making all this time. You've been saying that that 0.999... doesn't equal 1 because the "..." represents a process, not an actual number. And since that process never terminates, any maths we do on it is just an approximation, not an equality or identity. That 0.000... happens to have the same value at every point in the process doesn't mean that 0.000... isn't a process. 0.111... is a process, 0.222... is a process, ... , 0.999... is a process. But 0.000... isn't? How can we know that the result of the process is exactly zero, if we don't evaluate it all? Surely anything we say about 0.000... is just an approximation too?The result never varies from actually being zero. The interesting thing with 0.999... is that it is changing and what that means. No change: no paradox.
No, but I'm not talking about the intermediate steps, I'm talking about the end result. If I stop calculating at the 1,000th digit, then it's still just an approximation of the full, infinite process.Can you offer me an argument that any stage in iterating 0.000... will return a result other than plain ole zero?
I have to disagree.
Quantity and the relation of different quantities is not just an abstract concept.
To say that 1 = 0.999.... is not just a mathematical proposition. It at the same time is also a proposition about the physical reality regarding the quantity of an amount of 1 and an amount 0.999... We just have no way to test this physical reality, because our testing instrument lack infinite precision.
However, it is certainly possible that the rules of mathematics which would have 0.999=1 do not actually reflect this untestable actual physical reality of the relation of quantities, and thus it would be wrong in my book and the mathematical rules that say it wasn't would be flawed.
H and B are related by permeability, yes. But the electric field E is attenuated by permittivity and we don't suddenly use an extra term for the modified field and give it its own unit and declare at international metrology conferences that the two fields are fundamentally different phenomena.
The limit of a sequence (an ) is defined to be the real number a for which holds:
for every e>0 there is a ne such that |an - a| < e whenever n>ne,
if such number a exists.
That's what your argument implies, yes. (Well, more accurately, Zero is an approximation of 0 + 0 + 0 + ....)Zero plus zero is an approximation of zero?
That's super handwavey. If your argument works in nine out of ten cases, but doesn't work for the tenth, then it doesn't work. This isn't economics: if you have to add a "except in cases where it doesn't" get out clause in order to make the argument work, then the argument doesn't work. Zero is clearly a counter example to your argument.Mise you are trying to compare a paradox based upon an infinite series whose result changes with every iteration with a single value to which you have attached an infinite series of non-changes. The inaptness of the comparison is obvious. Carry on repeating yourself if you wish. Zero does not behave like other numbers. You know this.
The Wikipedia article on this topic discusses some of the common misconceptions that have come up in this thread.
1/9=0.999...
9 x 1/9=9 x 0.999...
1=0.999...
However, these proofs are not rigorous as they don't include a careful analytic definition of 0.999...
0.333... = 3/9
0.888... = 8/9
0.999... = 9/9
x=0.999...
10x=9.999...
10x=9 + 0.999...
10x=9 + x
9x=9
x=1