Deeper than primes

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"Atom" is one of many terms Doron uses with no regard to their actual meanings. It is certainly not being used in this thread by anyone in the sense of a physical particle, nor are we discussing the Big Bang. You seem to be going off on a tangent entirely of your own.

(You might want to check that your keyboard is working, you seem to be losing characters. (Planck, epoch, for example.))

Thanks

I was using an example to illustrate that I understood the argument.

There is little more I can say regarding the argument itself.
 
So infinity in base 2 is five times as big as infinity in base 10?

0.000...1[base 2] > 0.000...1[base 10] according to the ratio between 1/2 and 1/10.

As a result 0.999...[base 10] is closer to 1 than 0.111...[base 2]

In order to understand it please see the difference between 0.111...[base 2] and 0.222...[base 3] , according to the following diagram:

4318895416_e5d2042b0c_z.jpg
 
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"Atom" is one of many terms Doron uses with no regard to their actual meanings. It is certainly not being used in this thread by anyone in the sense of a physical particle, nor are we discussing the Big Bang. You seem to be going off on a tangent entirely of your own.
Again.

A point is exactly the smallest possible element.

A line segment is "at its best" an ever smaller element, which logically can't be reduced into the smallest possible element.

This reasoning is consistent, straightforward and easily understood by any open mind person.

The reasoning that can't get that is used by persons that do not have open minds, which is the majority of the current community of pure mathematicians that have no clue about the real complexity of the co-existence of the ever smaller AND the smallest.
 
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0.000...1[base 2] > 0.000...1[base 10] according to the ratio between 1/2 and 1/10.

As a result 0.999...[base 10] is closer to 1 than 0.111...[base 2]

In order to understand it please see the difference between 0.111...[base 2] and 0.222...[base 3] , according to the following diagram:

[qimg]http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2793/4318895416_e5d2042b0c_z.jpg?zz=1[/qimg]

I didn't ask about your imaginary construction 0.000...1, I asked about infinity. And zero is still zero whichever base it is in.
 
Again.

A point is exactly the smallest possible element.
Well, given that it has zero size, it couldn't be any smaller.

A line segment is "at its best" an ever smaller element, which logically can't be reduced into the smallest possible element.
Could you reword that to be in English?

This reasoning is consistent, straightforward and easily understood by any open mind person.
No, it isn't. It's not possible to see what you mean, so we can't tell if it makes sense (though I know which way I'd bet).
 
Could you reword your mind in order to get the ever smaller, which is logically irreducible to the smallest?
I thought you would be interested in that YouTube demonstration of creating a curve by drawing some of its slopes. Combined with "real math," it shows that a line segment whose length is approaching zero can be regarded as a point. That YouTube video treats the construction as an optical effect, but I did a short follow up. You draw two Cartesian co-ordinates both 10 units long and divide them on equidistant segments 1 unit in length and then connect the points as shown bellow.

curve1.png


The connecting lines create a near curve, which is a collection of ten straight lines where the red points are the points of intersection of the slope lines that lie on the curve. Since the curve is a collection of measurable straight lines, it's easy to estimate the length of the curve when it becomes smooth by simply measuring the distances from point to point and adding them together.

Measured combined length = 15.885793

In order to smooth the curve, you don't really need to divide both coordinates on many more segments -- a fairly simple use of parametric equations will utilize the coordinates of the red points, so you can derive the function of the curve. You can see the function that draws the curve that is now "infinitely smooth" bellow.

curve2.png


The function of the curve is equivalent to the procedure where you divide both coordinates on infinitely many segments and repeat the construction above, which is hardly possible. But the division establishes the length of each segment on the coordinates.

[lim n → ∞] 10/n = 0

The above tells you that the length of each line segment is approaching zero and you are free to treat each segment as a point. The same goes for the curve, which is now a collection of line segments whose number is approaching infinity. All you need to do is to measure each segment and add them together to get the length of the curve. That's not really possible, coz the number of those line segments is infinite. But there is that "Mathew Theorem":

Theorem 19:26
Jesus looked at them (it) and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”

And so you need to integrate:

Length of the curve = √2 010√ ((-22 (√ (44x + 1) + 44x +243)/(44x + 1)) dx = 15.900219...

Now compare the computed length whose precision is approaching infinity with the measured length, which was 15.885793. Not much of a difference, is it?

Point #1 is that you can't compute the length of a curve without defining it and treat it as a collection of line segments whose number is approaching infinity where the length of each segment is approaching zero.

Point #2 is that solving problems may require special definition and treatment of the objects that the problem is made of to get the job done. The mathematicians in the beginning of the 20th century attempted to put math "under one God" but Kurt Godel, that is Kurt GODel, showed them that it wasn't possible. And that's my contribution to the fallacies in the Bible by disproving the already mentioned "theorem":

Jesus looked at them (it) and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
Mathew 19:26
In 1926 he transferred to mathematics and coincidentally became a member of the M. Schlick circle.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/2273764

Wow! That's pretty good, "heavenly father." Keep manipulating and don't forget to send down some more stuff... LOL.
Cantor believed his theory of transfinite numbers had been communicated to him by God
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georg_Cantor

CANtor GODel TEACH MATH?

The rational dogma of the 21st century says, "no way!"
 
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Really laca, science tells us that all the atoms (points) where present in one point (singularity), at or slightly before the Planck epoc during the big bang.

Do explain what atoms got to do with infinite regress and the fact that 0.(9) equals exactly 1.

We have a vast quantity of atoms in the universe, nearly infinite in number. Perhaps these atoms or their precursors were nearly infinitely small at this point of time.

What you don't seem to realize is that "nearly infinite" is a meaningless term. Something is either infinite or finite. Nearly infinite would be finite. Same goes for "nearly infinitely small".

During the period of inflation presumably these atoms (points) somehow moved apart to form 3 dimensional space, they moved from nearly infinitely small to just small.

This “small” is the qualitative or relative aspect (line segment), the size (quality) of which is clearly finite as opposed to nearly or wholly infinite.

Without this relative finite small space between and defining the size of these atoms they could not have emerged from that nearly infinite point.

Try to stick to the topic please. And no, even if doron tries really hard, the topic is not gibberish.
 
sympathic attacs only the person without also deal with the considered subject in http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7059130&postcount=14884 .
Don't complain. The fringes of atheism manifest themselves that way, if you happen not to notice.

Your link puts you well outside Math city limits:

A point is exactly the smallest possible element.

If the point is the smallest element possible, then it has a magnitude, therefore its size can be compared with other objects. But such a definition has never appeared even in the most esoteric fields of mathematics. The point is treated by all as a dimensionless object -- the point is defined as a particular location within various geometric objects. According to your definition, the length (size) of a line segment minus the size of the points on it equals the actual length of the line segment. That notion calls for a particular computational demonstration, such as

Line is drawn by intersecting two points a and b thus creating line segment a,b. Additional number of points n is drawn on the line segment. So if the initial length of the line segment was L=|a-b| what is the combined length of those line segment separated by the new points after n points have been drawn on it? Is now the length of the a,b segment |a-b| + s*n, where s is the size of the point?
 
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I do not attack. Just observe and comment. For someone who preaches for a non violent approach I would expect a different choice of words. Another indication that your ideas are nonsenstial.

In Hebrew "to attack a mathematical problem" means "to deal with it until it is soleved (or not)".

Please show us the smallest line segemnt, arrogant sympathic (I just observe and comment), by using your agreed reasoning.
 
Don't complain. The fringes of atheism manifest themselves that way, if you happen not to notice.

Your link puts you well outside Math city limits:



If the point is the smallest element possible, then it has a magnitude, therefore its size can be compared with other objects. But such a definition has never appeared even in the most esoteric fields of mathematics. The point is treated by all as a dimensionless object -- the point is defined as a particular location within various geometric objects. According to your definition, the length (size) of a line segment minus the size of the points on it equals the actual length of the line segment. That notion calls for a particular computational demonstration, such as

Line is drawn by intersecting two points a and b thus creating line segment a,b. Additional number of points n is drawn on the line segment. So if the initial length of the line segment was L=|a-b| what is the combined length of those line segment separated by the new points after n points have been drawn on it? Is now the length of the a,b segment |a-b| + s*n, where s is the size of the point?

Please look at:

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7055090&postcount=14852

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7055191&postcount=14855
 
In Hebrew "to attack a mathematical problem" means "to deal with it until it is soleved (or not)".

Please show us the smallest line segemnt, arrogant sympathic (I just observe and comment), by using your agreed reasoning.

I can't show you the smallest line segment, because it does not exist, which proves that a line is completely covered by points. How about I show you the dumbest a human can get? ;)
 
I can't show you the smallest line segment, because it does not exist, which proves that a line is completely covered by points. How about I show you the dumbest a human can get? ;)
Cantor proved that the assumption of every point on the real line being accounted for is false. The "smallest line segment" does exist but it is undetectable as much as the number of points on the real line is uncountable. You can somewhat get the notion of the uncovered space by looking at irrational numbers and some rational numbers approaching their limits, such as 3.1415... approaching its limit Pi, or 0.1111... approaching its limit 1/9. Both limit points Pi and 1/9 do not really exist, coz they are unreachable within the type of real line used by Cantor for his diagonal prove. You can see that the diagonal method involves the approximate (radix) format, as it must.

A900140-Cantors_infinity_diagonalisation_proof-SPL.jpg


Since the value of an irrational number infinitely increases in a convergent manner, it cannot reach a certain value, which is called "the limit." So there must be always some space left. This is all irrelevant to geometry, coz locating points with infinite precision is good enough for any sane person.
 
Cantor proved that the assumption of every point on the real line being accounted for is false. The "smallest line segment" does exist but it is undetectable as much as the number of points on the real line is uncountable.

How can a smallest line segment exist if for every line segment you show there is a smaller one?
 
How can a smallest line segment exist if for every line segment you show there is a smaller one?
There is no smallest line segment as much as there is no "biggest number." There is a space opening when limits are present

[lim n → ∞] 1/n = 0

The above tells you that when n grows unbound like 1, 2, 3, 4, . . . , the length 1/n of each segment of the line being divided ad infinitum is approaching zero, but it can't ever reach it, coz n grows without bound. The intuition tells you that if you try to reach something and can't, there is always some space between your hand and the object. And that's what Doron has been looking at.

The notion that the line is entirely covered by points is a part of the definition of the line -- it's not a theorem to be proven -- and the definition has worked fine for the purposes of Euclidean geometry. But there are different conditions in the set theory where the set of real numbers can be also likened to points on the line. Cantor's set theory doesn't just treat infinity as geometry does -- it attempts to compare one infinity to another infinity, like the infinitude of natural numbers to the infinitude of rational numbers, so some implied "spaces" between these numbers should be taken into account. Here, the intuitive thinking may fail, as it did when Cantor published his results to shake up the intuitive understanding of infinity that happened to be correct just for the practical purposes of computing. Facing the requirements of the set theory, the full point coverage idea must be carefully defined with non-verbal terms. I can't do that though.
 
In Hebrew "to attack a mathematical problem" means "to deal with it until it is soleved (or not)".

Please show us the smallest line segemnt, arrogant sympathic (I just observe and comment), by using your agreed reasoning.

Hit a nerve have I? The fact that I learned some math for my degree has nothing to do with arrogance. Humbleness allows learning from others - a quality you are lacking.
 
Hit a nerve have I? The fact that I learned some math for my degree has nothing to do with arrogance. Humbleness allows learning from others - a quality you are lacking.
No, you are missing the nerve, actually your own nerve, because instead of using your own reasoning in order to really examine what enables the existence of different smallest elements along a line segment (such that no sub-line segment has the form of the smallest element), you let your "humbleness" to continue the ignorance that you are learning from others.

In other words, you prefer to be one of the herb instead of really get to the "heart and bones" of this non-trivial fine subject.


Please show us the smallest line segment by using your "humbleness" in order to use the reasoning that you are learning from others.
 
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Cantor proved that the assumption of every point on the real line being accounted for is false. The "smallest line segment" does exist but it is undetectable as much as the number of points on the real line is uncountable.

In other words, you do not understand (yet) the following:

http://www.mathacademy.com/pr/prime/articles/cantor_theorem/index.asp is a clear example of Cantor's theorem as a proof by contradiction, which leads to contradiction if one tries to define mapping between an explicit P(S) member and S member, because of the construction rules of the explicit P(S) member (the member of S must be AND can't be a member of the explicit P(S) member, according to the construction rules of the explicit P(S) member, under Cantor's theorem).

Also since |P(S)| is not less than |S| (because it is trivial to show that all S members (for example {a,b,c,d,...}) are at least mapped with {{a},{b},{c},{d},...} P(S) members), then by using this fact and the contradiction shown above, one must conclude that P(S) is a larger set than S.

----------------------------------------------

But this is not the only way to look at this case, for example, we are using Cantor's construction method to systematically and explicitly define P(S) members, for example:

By using the trivial mapping between {a,b,c,d,...} S members and {{a},{b},{c},{d},...} P(S) members, we explicitly define P(S) member {}.

Also by using the mapping between {a,b,c,d,...} S members and {{},{a},{b},{c},...} P(S) members, we explicitly define P(S) member {a,b,c,d,...}.

Actually by using Cantor's construction method independently of Cantor's theorem, we are able to explicitly define the all P(S) members between {} and {a,b,c,d,...}.

As a result, there is a bijection between S and P(S) members, as follows:

a ↔ {}
b ↔ {a,b,c,d,...}
c ↔ some explicit P(S) member, which is different than the previous mapped P(S) members

...

etc. ... ad infinitum.

Please be aware of the fact that this construction method has nothing to do with Cantor's theorem exactly because the construction is used independently of Cantor's theorem and therefore it is not restricted to the logical terms of Cantor's theorem.

In other words, the distinction between countable and uncountable infinite sets has no basis.

Actually Dedekind's definition for infinite sets (which according to it there is a bisection between any given infinite set and some proper subset of it) is true also in the case of the mapping between the members of P(S) and the members of S, where S is indeed a proper subset of P(S).

The bijection between the members of P(S) and the members of S is equivalent to the bejection between the members of N and the members of even numbers, or the members of Q and the members of N, etc ...

Yet no one of these sets is complete, because no infinite set of distinct objects has the magnitude of Fullness, which is that has no successor (and a line is the minimal expression of Fullness).
 
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In other words, you do not understand (yet) the following:

http://www.mathacademy.com/pr/prime/articles/cantor_theorem/index.asp is a clear example of Cantor's theorem as a proof by contradiction, which leads to contradiction if one tries to define mapping between an explicit P(S) member and S member, because of the construction rules of the explicit P(S) member (the member of S must be AND can't be a member of the explicit P(S) member, according to the construction rules of the explicit P(S) member, under Cantor's theorem).
What are you talking about? Cantor's proof of R being an uncountable infinite set got nothing to do with Cantor's theorem, which deals with a size relation between a set and its power set and leads toward the proof that the power set of any countably infinite set is uncountably infinite. I was explicitly referring to the proof of uncountability of R.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantor's_diagonal_argument
Have you missed the large numbers picture with 3.14159... on top in the relevant post?
 
What are you talking about? Cantor's proof of R being an uncountable infinite set got nothing to do with Cantor's theorem, which deals with a size relation between a set and its power set and leads toward the proof that the power set of any countably infinite set is uncountably infinite. I was explicitly referring to the proof of uncountability of R.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantor's_diagonal_argument
Have you missed the large numbers picture with 3.14159... on top in the relevant post?

You are wrong.

א (which is the cardinality of R) and 2א0 (which is the cardinality of P(N)) have the same magnitude.
 
Have you missed the large numbers picture with 3.14159... on top in the relevant post?
Are you kidding?

I am the one who argue all along this thread (which does not agree with the traditional argument about this subject) that 3.14159...[base 10] < pi
 
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Are you kidding?

I am the one who argue all along this thread (which does not agree with the traditional argument about this subject) that 3.14159...[base 10] < pi
Math operations are mostly done with numbers in exact format, that means with the limits. For the practical use, the result of the operation in the exact format has to be converted into the aproximate format, coz Log(25) + Cos(pi/3) pounds is not what you find on the weight scale. Pi also needs to be converted into the usable approximate format, so this identity appears: Pi = 3.14159... But that's not true, coz "pi" is a symbol for the limit whose real value is uknown and which exists only in the exact format, such as pi=circumference/diameter. The real value becomes more and more precise ad infinitum, and obviously converges. Since there is no correspondence between infinity and physical realities the fact that 3.14159... doesn't equal pi but is getting infinitely close to it is infinitely negligible.
 
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I am the one who argue all along this thread (which does not agree with the traditional argument about this subject) that 3.14159...[base 10] < pi

I'm not sure I see the relevance of mentioning the base. I also don't think you can show that anyone in this thread has said that if you stop the evaluation of pi at any arbitrary number of places that it isn't less than the full value. However, since you have used ellipses, that implies an infinite expansion, which would be equal to pi. Again, your limitations trip you up.
 
No, you are missing the nerve, actually your own nerve, because instead of using your own reasoning in order to really examine what enables the existence of different smallest elements along a line segment (such that no sub-line segment has the form of the smallest element), you let your "humbleness" to continue the ignorance that you are learning from others.

In other words, you prefer to be one of the herb instead of really get to the "heart and bones" of this non-trivial fine subject.


Please show us the smallest line segment by using your "humbleness" in order to use the reasoning that you are learning from others.
You think you are smarter than everyone else, yet call others arrogant. Another contradiction?
 
I'm not sure I see the relevance of mentioning the base. I also don't think you can show that anyone in this thread has said that if you stop the evaluation of pi at any arbitrary number of places that it isn't less than the full value.

zooterkin, pi is an exact location along the real line, so there is no evaluation of pi.

On the contrary 3.14159...[base 10] is not pi exactly because any given smaller sub-line segment is irreducible into the smallest element, which is the point at the exact location of pi, along the real line.
 
You think you are smarter than everyone else, yet call others arrogant. Another contradiction?
You still do not get that the answer to this non-trivial subject is not given by any one but you, sympathic.

Instead of doing the must have journey into your own mind in order to really deal with the considered fine subject, you are using only the reasoning that you are learning from others.
 
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Math operations are mostly done with numbers in exact format, that means with the limits. For the practical use, the result of the operation in the exact format has to be converted into the aproximate format, coz Log(25) + Cos(pi/3) pounds is not what you find on the weight scale. Pi also needs to be converted into the usable approximate format, so this identity appears: Pi = 3.14159... But that's not true, coz "pi" is a symbol for the limit whose real value is uknown and which exists only in the exact format, such as pi=circumference/diameter. The real value becomes more and more precise ad infinitum, and obviously converges. Since there is no correspondence between infinity and physical realities the fact that 3.14159... doesn't equal pi but is getting infinitely close to it is infinitely negligible.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7066865&postcount=14916

Also please do not ignore http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7066490&postcount=14911 and the rest of http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7066349&postcount=14908 .
 
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You still do not get that the answer to this non-trivial subject is not given by any one but you, sympathic.

Instead of doing the must have journey into your own mind in order to really deal with the considered fine subject, you are using only the reasoning that you are learning from others.

The only journey you need to take to understand these elementry concepts is to your local college math classroom.
 
The only journey you need to take to understand these elementry concepts is to your local college math classroom.
You did this journey, so please use it in order to define the smallest sub-line segment.

Be aware of the fact that no sub-line segment is reducible to the smallest existing element, which is a point.

If you can't define the smallest sub-line segment, you have no choice but to conclude that no collection of the smallest elements (known as point) completely covers an element that it is irreducible into a point.

Actually without the existence of the ever smaller elements between any arbitrary closer points, there are no distinct points at all.

Furthermore, the journey you made can't help you to get http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=7066349&postcount=14908 .
 
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