TuxDave
Lifer
- Oct 8, 2002
- 10,571
- 3
- 71
Originally posted by: bleeb
YES !!!
lol! I guess you deserved the 1000th post. So... what's your opinion on this?
Originally posted by: bleeb
YES !!!
Originally posted by: Acanthus
i can apply the same logic the .99999r people are using to any number and round it to whatever i want.
.9r does not = 1
no book can prove or disprove that, its the holy grail of math
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: Acanthus
i can apply the same logic the .99999r people are using to any number and round it to whatever i want.
.9r does not = 1
no book can prove or disprove that, its the holy grail of math
No you can't. 3 != 5 because 4 is > 3 and < 5. Therefore 3 < 5.
You can't find any such number in between 0.9... and 1.
Originally posted by: yamahaXS
this thread was supposed to get locked at 999.
what the hell happened!?!?!?
Originally posted by: Apathetic
Oh God, not again! Make it STOP!!
Your math is flawed.
10x - x = 9.9999... - 0.9999... <---- NOT a true statement!
Look at it the other way around. Let's say we start with the value "1" and then I subtract the smallest number in existence, "0.00000000000 (a zillion more zeroes go here) 0000001". Now, is that number still 1.0? If you say yes, then you are claiming that subtraction does not exist.
Dave
Originally posted by: dighn
Originally posted by: Apathetic
Oh God, not again! Make it STOP!!
Your math is flawed.
10x - x = 9.9999... - 0.9999... <---- NOT a true statement!
Look at it the other way around. Let's say we start with the value "1" and then I subtract the smallest number in existence, "0.00000000000 (a zillion more zeroes go here) 0000001". Now, is that number still 1.0? If you say yes, then you are claiming that subtraction does not exist.
Dave
1-0.9r = 0.0000000.... if you put a 1 after the sequence that implies there is an end to it when there is no such end. the 1 would be located at "infinity" imo it wouldn't be part of the number because there is no end to it.
and i still would like to see somebody to debunk a proof like this:
1/3 = 0.3r
1 = 1/3 * 3 = 0.3r * 3 = 0.9r
Originally posted by: MadRat
Clearly 1<>.999... and if you skim the last twenty pages then you'll see that no argument holds water contrary to this fact.
Originally posted by: josphII
Originally posted by: MadRat
Clearly 1<>.999... and if you skim the last twenty pages then you'll see that no argument holds water contrary to this fact.
what are you talking about? the mathematical proof was given within the first 100 posts. there seem to be two common misconseptions in this thread:
1) the difference between .9r and 1 is 1/infinity
2) the difference is 0.000...1 (maybe some people think 1/infinity = 0.000...1???)
anyways both arguments are fictitous because 1/infinity EQUALS zero. Thats right folks 1/infinity = 0. A lot of people simply cant grasp this concept, they think 1/infinity is some very very small amount - well thats wrong. again 1/infinity == 0.
for the people that think the difference is 0.000...1 (or think that 1/inf = 0.000...1) this is obviously false because you can not have an infinite string of numbers and then a number after that. infinity, by definition, has no end. by putting a 1 after an infinite string of 0's you violate the very principle of infinity.
the proof was stated about post #70 and im not going to repost it. it will only take about 2 seconds for you to go back and find it or use google. but to understand the proof you really need a background in calculus II, which probably only 1 out of every 100 AT'ers have. and thats the problem in this thread - 99 out of every 100 peolpe reading this thread lack the very foundation for which the proof is based on, and 1 person out of every 100 trying to enlighten a hoard of ignorance.
Originally posted by: Kyteland
Originally posted by: josphII
Originally posted by: MadRat
Clearly 1<>.999... and if you skim the last twenty pages then you'll see that no argument holds water contrary to this fact.
what are you talking about? the mathematical proof was given within the first 100 posts. there seem to be two common misconseptions in this thread:
1) the difference between .9r and 1 is 1/infinity
2) the difference is 0.000...1 (maybe some people think 1/infinity = 0.000...1???)
anyways both arguments are fictitous because 1/infinity EQUALS zero. Thats right folks 1/infinity = 0. A lot of people simply cant grasp this concept, they think 1/infinity is some very very small amount - well thats wrong. again 1/infinity == 0.
for the people that think the difference is 0.000...1 (or think that 1/inf = 0.000...1) this is obviously false because you can not have an infinite string of numbers and then a number after that. infinity, by definition, has no end. by putting a 1 after an infinite string of 0's you violate the very principle of infinity.
the proof was stated about post #70 and im not going to repost it. it will only take about 2 seconds for you to go back and find it or use google. but to understand the proof you really need a background in calculus II, which probably only 1 out of every 100 AT'ers have. and thats the problem in this thread - 99 out of every 100 peolpe reading this thread lack the very foundation for which the proof is based on, and 1 person out of every 100 trying to enlighten a hoard of ignorance.
Even though I believe that 1=0.9999.... I'm going to have to say that you are wrong here. You claim that 1/infinity == 0. If this is true than by simple algebra we get that 1/0 == infinity. While it is nice to assume this for use in simplifying certain equations, it is simply untrue. In spite of what your high school math teacher told you, division by 0 is undefined.
Ugh, the first link in google. I would heve preferred a different source, but....
Hmm. Better link. Also check out the "Does infinity exist? "link on that page.
Sorry, that wasn't meant as an insult (probably why it was out of left field) Most people learn the 1/infinity = 0 thing in high school. I know I did. I was shown a proof in college as to why it was not, but I don't remember it anymore. A quick google search gave the above links, but they weren't really what I was looking for. I may try to find the proof I was thinking of later when I am not at work.firstly your insult is totally out of left field there
My degree is in Computer Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign with a minor in Mathematics. I am currently working as a Mathematician in the gaming industry making slot machines.and as a matter of fact, although i dont have a degree in mathmatics, I do hold a b.s. degree in nuclear engineering from the university of ca. at berkeley. and you?
Originally posted by: Kyteland
I am currently working as a Mathematician in the gaming industry making slot machines.
so... what is the secret to hitting the big one? do i have to kick the side of the machine somewhere?
Originally posted by: spanky
Originally posted by: Kyteland
I am currently working as a Mathematician in the gaming industry making slot machines.
so... what is the secret to hitting the big one? do i have to kick the side of the machine somewhere?