Originally posted by d000hg
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Maths query
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Surely 0.9 recurring is not equivalent to 1.
Even if, functionally, it might as well be. It will not because there will be an infinitesimally small difference as the limit tends towards infinity.
The difference might become so small that we have trouble expressing it but it will still be there.Comment
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That's absolutely true, the sequence and its limit are not the same thing.Originally posted by Bacchus View PostThis is the value beyond which the sequence can not progress, it is NOT the value that the sequence reaches. They are not the same thing.
But 0.999.. is defined as, or rather denotes, the limit of the sequence.
It doesn't represent the sequence, or (in this case) any term of the sequence, and it therefore doesn't share the sequence terms' property of being less than 1.
You're almost there, but you still somehow end up identifiying 0.999.. with an element of the sequence (presumably because their notation looks much the same - but that is slightly misleading).Last edited by OwlHoot; 7 October 2014, 10:05.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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If it's an infinite sequence, isn't 0.999... the infiniteth element of the sequence?Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostThat's absolutely true, the sequence and its limit are not the same thing.
But 0.999.. is defined as, or rather denotes, the limit of the sequence.
It doesn't represent the sequence, or (in this case) any term of the sequence, and it therefore doesn't share the sequence terms' property of being less than 1.
You're almost there, but you still somehow end up identifiying 0.999.. with an element of the sequence (presumably because their notation looks much the same - but that is slightly misleading).Comment
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But there's more of the sequence after that....Originally posted by Bunk View PostIf it's an infinite sequence, isn't 0.999... the infiniteth element of the sequence?Comment
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There's no such thing as "the" infinitieth element. For any element you choose, there's always a larger one.Originally posted by Bunk View PostIf it's an infinite sequence, isn't 0.999... the infiniteth element of the sequence?
The sequence represents a potential infinity, as opposed to an actual or completed infinity.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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I love that we have people arguing until they're blue in the face over widely accepted mathematical constructs. Yes, all those people who have devoted their entire lives to maths must be wrong and incompetent, because CUK knows better.Comment
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Which part of "the real number system" did you not understand?Originally posted by Bacchus View PostThat's feeble
There are no integer values between 1 and 2; doesn't make them the same thing.
There is no number (in the real number system, with standard analysis) between 0.99999.... and 1. Therefore (in the real number system, with standard analysis) 0.99999... and 1 are simply different representations of the same number.
The reason they are the same number is nothing to do with limits; rather the definition of real numbers.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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You can tell the few people here who actually have an inkling of how hard the real number system is.Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostWhich part of "the real number system" did you not understand?
There is no number (in the real number system, with standard analysis) between 0.99999.... and 1. Therefore (in the real number system, with standard analysis) 0.99999... and 1 are simply different representations of the same number.
The reason they are the same number is nothing to do with limits; rather the definition of real numbers.Comment
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostWhich part of "the real number system" did you not understand?
Exactly. It has a goddamn Wikipedia page FFS. They also have it in the FAQ over at sci.math and in countless other forums. Mathematics is all about internal consistency, based on precise rules. If you don't know the rules, you have no hope of discussing their implications.
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