The Man said:
None of the circle's length is along its radius, it is all along its circumference. Your “string” has no such restriction and so portions of it can be closer to the center (but not further) than the radius of the circle.
The Man, you simply cant rid of the use of points (localities) in your analysis.
The circle and the Koch’s fractal are both closed 1-dim elements, with not even a single point along them.
Inside each convergent circle’s length (which is a 1-dim atomic element) there is a Koch’s fractal (which is a 1-dim atomic element) which its length is invariant upon infinitely many convergent levels.
As a result the convergent series of circles is infinite as long as the invariant length within each convergent circle is found, and more precisely, the increased complexity of Koch’s invariant length is found.
If this convergent series of circles’ lengths has the value of the limit (which is zero) Koch’s fractal invariant length and its infinite increased complexity is lost.
Conclusion: Koch’s fractal invariant length and its infinite increased complexity, is found as long as the value of the limit (which is 0) is not reached, and as a result we get a naturally open and incomplete convergent series.
So did you simply miss that fact or are you deliberately ignoring it?
The Man said:
I can put a 500 foot long rope in a barrel with an opening circumference of 2 feet (as long as the barrel is deep enough), so what? Geometry certainly isn’t your forte; you are still having demonstrative problems with the concept of dimensions
“So what” clearly summarizes your “deep” understanding of this subject.
The Man said:
Again we see that you simply do not understand, how you misinterpret and misrepresent what you call “standard math”.
Again we see how your standard notion that is based on stretched points as the basis of lines, prevents from you to understand the real complexity, which is the result of Non-locality\Locality Linkage.
The Man said:
Instead you are simply talking about the terms of the series and confusing (again I think deliberately) that with the sum of those terms.
The terms of the series are exactly the reason of why the given series has no limit and no sum (it is inherently incomplete).
The Man said:
As already pointed out to you by jsfisher, none of those are fractals.
Simply wrong, and your insistence to claim otherwise does not change the fact that it is a wrong argument of jsfisher, on this subject.
The Man said:
Again as already explained to you before, just because the set of terms in the series may not include its limit as a member of that set does not infer that the set of sums for that series can not include its limit as a member of that set
As already explained to you before, any infinite collection is inherently incomplete, exactly because it is not limited to any class.
The Man said:
again the fact that an infinite convergent series has a finite sum was proven over 2,300 years ago.
This “proof” was wrong 2,300 years ago, it is wrong now, and it will stay wrong for the next coming 2,300 years.
In other words, it is a time independent false.