it is in English or was in my day we learnt the times tables for eg.Promethax said:I think you lost all mathematical credibility as soon as you used "times" as a verb.
it is in English or was in my day we learnt the times tables for eg.Promethax said:I think you lost all mathematical credibility as soon as you used "times" as a verb.
Yes, I'm sure that is what they told Shakespeare when he was pioneering the process of verbing nouns.direkiller said:because it makes the word multiply angryfenrizz said:Promethax said:I think you lost all mathematical credibility as soon as you used "times" as a verb.What is wrong with using time as a verb?Zachary Amaranth said:Yeah, had trouble taking anything beyond that point seriously. Which is actually good practice, since there were no serious mathematics breakthroughs here.Promethax said:I think you lost all mathematical credibility as soon as you used "times" as a verb.
(it also makes what your writing sound stupid and unintelligible)
Language is not static.Harvard Professor Steven Pinker said:Easy conversion of nouns to verbs has been part of English grammar for centuries; it is one of the processes that make English English.
All math is based on logic. You can't divide something into nothing. It's that simple. To put it more clearly you have an apple. You divide by 1, that means splitting the apple in 1 even part. You still have one apple. Divide by 2 you split the apple in two even parts. You have 2 halves of an apple. Now tell me how you divide the apple into zero equal parts.Zack1501 said:So if 0/0=x and 0/0=0 then 0 does not equal x? I don't understand what you mean, please elaborate. I actuality want to understand why this is wrong past the usual argument of "Well you just cant divide by zero" That might be true but i have yet to find a person to tell me why I cant.Vegosiux said:Disproved math? No. Proved that you hardly know anything about math? Yes.Zack1501 said:So, I have an interesting math based question. If you don't like/hate math or don't understand basic algebra(I understand if you don't) just hit the big THE ESCAPIST logo in the corner and that will bring you home.
I wanted to know zero divided by zero equals. I tried to do at algebraically. This is what I did:
-The answer I was trying to get will be represented by x
0/0=x
-I times both sides by zero
0=0x
-This equals out to be 0=0 because anything times 0 is 0.
-This proves that x can be any number. for example if 5=x than 0=5*0 still is 0=0
-I rearrange 0=0x to be:
0/x=0
-Now since x can be any number now lets say x=0
-That makes this:
0/0=0
-And since x=0/0 (Right in the beginning^) and 0=0/0 also then x=0
-If you fallowed so far and remember that x can be any number then that means zero can also be any and every number. So 0 can now equal 5 or any other number.
I realize something is most likely wrong here.
So tell me escapist, Did i Disprove math?
I bolded the part where you completely missed the point and made a conclusion that could only be characterized as and "ass pull", because 0/0 is an undefined expression.
i havent looked through the 5 pages of thread to see if youve been replied to, so i apologise in advance if im spamming your inbox.Zack1501 said:So if 0/0=x and 0/0=0 then 0 does not equal x? I don't understand what you mean, please elaborate. I actuality want to understand why this is wrong past the usual argument of "Well you just cant divide by zero" That might be true but i have yet to find a person to tell me why I cant.Vegosiux said:Disproved math? No. Proved that you hardly know anything about math? Yes.Zack1501 said:So, I have an interesting math based question. If you don't like/hate math or don't understand basic algebra(I understand if you don't) just hit the big THE ESCAPIST logo in the corner and that will bring you home.
I wanted to know zero divided by zero equals. I tried to do at algebraically. This is what I did:
-The answer I was trying to get will be represented by x
0/0=x
-I times both sides by zero
0=0x
-This equals out to be 0=0 because anything times 0 is 0.
-This proves that x can be any number. for example if 5=x than 0=5*0 still is 0=0
-I rearrange 0=0x to be:
0/x=0
-Now since x can be any number now lets say x=0
-That makes this:
0/0=0
-And since x=0/0 (Right in the beginning^) and 0=0/0 also then x=0
-If you fallowed so far and remember that x can be any number then that means zero can also be any and every number. So 0 can now equal 5 or any other number.
I realize something is most likely wrong here.
So tell me escapist, Did i Disprove math?
I bolded the part where you completely missed the point and made a conclusion that could only be characterized as and "ass pull", because 0/0 is an undefined expression.
VladG said:Zack1501 said:Ok, I understand your reasoning behind this but you need to look at this problem a little more theoretically.(Just the fist part though, everything after o=x and after I realizes is 100% false) Your saying there is 1 apple and you want it in 2 separate groups so thats 1/2. That makes sense. You want to know how to make 1 apple in 0 separate groups so 1/0. No, thats stupid you could have an infinite amount of groups of zero and would still have one full apple. Thats not what i was arguing. What I'm saying is that you have 0 apples and want to sort it in 0 groups. I'm not sure on the answer to this, what I THINK is that it is any number because you can have as many groups of 0 as you want. technically this probably doesn't matter and it definitely has no real world value; But this is the internet, we argue the pointless into the ground!Vegosiux said:All math is based on logic. You can't divide something into nothing. It's that simple. To put it more clearly you have an apple. You divide by 1, that means splitting the apple in 1 even part. You still have one apple. Divide by 2 you split the apple in two even parts. You have 2 halves of an apple. Now tell me how you divide the apple into zero equal parts.
To put it mathematically there is no real number which, when multiplied by 0, gives x (x≠0)
Please hit that "The Escapist" button you were talking about.
This is not the error. It is not 0(0)/0 it is 0(0/0) and as we all know anything times 0 equals 0 so the entire side is 0 thus 0=x0. The error is me saying x=0 when x does not, it just can equal 0.Okysho said:I've only got a few seconds but here's your first mistake. You can't do this. It's bad math. When you multiply both sides by zero, it's not just "moving one digit from one side to the other" you're creating an x/x situation (which equals 1) 0/0 is undefinded therefore by your equation in this multiplication step:Zack1501 said:I wanted to know zero divided by zero equals. I tried to do at algebraically. This is what I did:
-The answer I was trying to get will be represented by x
0/0=x
-I times both sides by zero
0=0x
0/0=x
0(0)/0 = 0(x)
but you're still left with a 0/0 it cannot divide out to make 1.
Here's what you're doing without using 0.
x/7 = y
7(x)/7 = y(7)
x = y(7)
See the error?
No... Just noZack1501 said:Snip
Wait what? Didn't you just disprove idiocy and implement math to get the correct answer?Regnes said:Math: 5 + 3 x 4 x 5^2 = 320
This is false, the correct answer is:
5 + 3 x 4 x 5^2
= 5 + 3 x 4 x 25
= 5 + 3 x 100
= 5 + 300
= 305
I have disproved bad math.
I'm sorry, but you are wrong. You simply are.Blade1130 said:Not true, infinity + 1 does in fact equal infinity, however the second infinity is greater than the infinity used first.Maze1125 said:infinity + 1 = infinity
There's absolutely nothing wrong with him producing that extra 1, infinity is such that it allows that.
To use overly complicated mathematics to prove something conceptually quite simple.
The definition of L'Hopital's Rule is:
(where f(x) & g(x) are continuous, differentiable functions and f'(x) is the derivative of f(x) and g'(x) is the derivative of g(x))
If Lim[sub]x->a[/sub](f(x) / g(x)) = 0 / 0 || inf / inf then
Lim[sub]x->a[/sub](f(x) / g(x)) = Lim[sub]x->a[/sub](f'(x) / g'(x))
We can use this rule to prove how one function grows greater than another and thereby how one infinity is greater than another. Consider the example:
If f(x) = e[sup]x[/sup] and g(x) = x
Lim[sub]x->inf[/sub](e[sup]x[/sup] / x) = e[sup]inf[/sup] / inf = inf / inf (therefore L'Hopital's Rule applies, thus we derive the top and bottom and find the limit)
Lim[sub]x->inf[/sub](e[sup]x[/sup] / 1) = e[sup]inf[/sup] / 1 = e[sup]inf[/sup] = inf
The answer of infinity tells us that f(x) = e[sup]x[/sup] grows faster than g(x) = x, which can be seen quite obviously by graphing both equations. But if we simply plug in infinity to both equations we get:
f(inf) = e[sup]inf[/sup] = inf AND g(inf) = inf
By this logic f(inf) = g(inf), but as L'Hopital's Rule proves, f(x) grows faster than g(x) and (after checking initial values) there is no point x on the interval (-inf, inf) in which g(x) >= f(x). Therefore f(x) != g(x) on any x. As such infinity does not equal infinity.
Infinity can equal infinity, but it must be the same infinity. The infinity that is the result of f(x) is greater than the infinity created by g(x). Although f(inf) does equal infinity, it is a different infinity than the one in g(inf).
By the way there is a small error in there, I'm curious if anyone can find it and call me out on it. I'm at a loss of how to explain it without that error, but lets see if anyone finds it to begin with.
EDIT: To go back to the original example he is saying (1 - 1) * inf = inf - inf = 1 which is not true.
(1 - 1) * inf = inf - inf = 0 as it should. Think about it in a way that does not use infinities.
(1 - 1) + (1 - 1) + (1 - 1) = 0 = true
Shifting all parentheses to the right
1 + (-1 + 1) + (-1 + 1) + (-1) = 0 = still true
He is forgetting that last -1, the fact that it is (1 - 1) * inf, means that EVEN TO INFINITY, there are the same number of 1's as -1's and therefore equals 0.
I do know why it's wrong, for starters. But any decent calculator will tell you exactly why 0/0 is wrong by stating "Undefined."Zack1501 said:Ok, I get it I'm wrong(If you people actual paid closer attention to my post you would realize i didn't think it was true ether) But this answer pissed me off the most. You punch something into your calculator and it said error so you ignore it? You don't care why? Just because a calculator cant understand it does not mean thats the end.Sexy Devil said:Punch 0/0 into your calculator for me and see what happens. Nothing divides by 0, not even 0. Full stop. The end.
Seems logical, but I have a (probably stupid/obvious) question. When working with the field of "normal" real numbers, I have often (I think?) multiplied by 0. for example in the quadratic x^2=0, the solutions are both zero. This is apparently a thing you would do using the "rules of calculus" (I think, anyway). If you are never allowed to use the number 0 in the "normal" real numbers, How come I seem to come across it so much in my "normal" maths lessons? Can you explain, please?Keal said:Hi Zack,
If you really want to understand the problems in your example, you have to start at rather basic mathematics: the notion of a Group.
A Group is a set G together with an operation ° such that the following axioms hold:
Closure:
If a and b are elements in G the a°b is also in G.
Associativity:
For a,b,c in G the equality a°(b°c)= (a°b)°c holds.
Neutral element:
There is an element e in G such that a°e =e°a = a for all a in G. e is called the neutral or the unit element.
Inverse element:
For every a in G there is a b in G such that a°b = b°a = e. b is called the inverse of a and is formally denoted by a^(-1).
If we have Commutativity (a,b in G: a°b = b°a), we speak of an abelian Group.
From these axioms you can derive the "rules of calculus" you are used to from school (for the abstract group G).
If you look closely you will see that this group structure is realized in the real numbers R, even in two different ways.
First: the real numbers and addition (R,+)
Closure and associativity are trivial, the neutral element is 0 and the inverse of an element a is (-a). Note that the "-" is more a way to denote the inverse rather then an operation it self.
Second: the real numbers without zero and multiplication (R\{0},*)
Closure and associativity are trivial again, the neutral element is 1 and the inverse is 1/a. Again division is not an operation but a way to denote the inverse and that is reason way "it is forbidden to divide by zero", there is no multiplicative inverse of zero in the real numbers, i.e. there is no a in R such that a*0=1.
So if you decide "to do it anyway" you loose the group structure and the "rules of calculus" you derived using this structure do not apply anymore. That is why it seems easy to construct paradoxes starting from "1/0".
For completeness: If you "combine" two abelian groups with a distributive rule (a,b,c in G (a+b)°c= a°c+b°c) you get a field. If you do that for (R,+) and (R\{0},*) you get the "normal" real numbers with addition and multiplication.
To quote the Terminator in T2, "It doesn't work that way."Zack1501 said:Why not?gumba killer said:You can't divide by zero.
I think that's going a bit too far.Keal said:So if you decide "to do it anyway" you loose the group structure and the "rules of calculus" you derived using this structure do not apply anymore.
Put simply, it's because fields have been built to account for that. So they allow it.asacatman said:Seems logical, but I have a (probably stupid/obvious) question. When working with the field of "normal" real numbers, I have often (I think?) multiplied by 0. for example in the quadratic x^2=0, the solutions are both zero. This is apparently a thing you would do using the "rules of calculus" (I think, anyway). If you are never allowed to use the number 0 in the "normal" real numbers, How come I seem to come across it so much in my "normal" maths lessons? Can you explain, please?
Hopefully I haven't made too many idiotic statements.
A bad calculator will say "error"Sexy Devil said:I do know why it's wrong, for starters. But any decent calculator will tell you exactly why 0/0 is wrong by stating "Undefined."Zack1501 said:Ok, I get it I'm wrong(If you people actual paid closer attention to my post you would realize i didn't think it was true ether) But this answer pissed me off the most. You punch something into your calculator and it said error so you ignore it? You don't care why? Just because a calculator cant understand it does not mean thats the end.Sexy Devil said:Punch 0/0 into your calculator for me and see what happens. Nothing divides by 0, not even 0. Full stop. The end.
But yeah, if you can't trust your calculator with basic algebra then you might want to look into getting a new one.