Quote from: Nasty Turkey. SAD! on February 06, 2017, 03:09:25 PMI'm interested to hear what level of math has been competed by those who say 4 is greater, and vice versa.It really doesn't matter. This is a matter of logic, not math.The problem with your syllogism above is that you correlated 1.3 Μ with 4/3, which is false.
I'm interested to hear what level of math has been competed by those who say 4 is greater, and vice versa.
Quote from: SecondClass on February 06, 2017, 03:11:32 PMEVEN IF IT WAS ENDLESS, it does not equal 1/3. It will always have infinitely less decimal places than it needs to be 1/3.won't there will always be the precise number of decimal places neededbecause it's endlessQuoteIf you need clarification to the second paragraph, I don't know what to tell you.oh good, because i doyou tell me, "sorry for typing a sentence that reads like it was written by a 9 year old," and then you clarify
EVEN IF IT WAS ENDLESS, it does not equal 1/3. It will always have infinitely less decimal places than it needs to be 1/3.
If you need clarification to the second paragraph, I don't know what to tell you.
Quote from: SecondClass on February 06, 2017, 03:14:22 PMQuote from: Nasty Turkey. SAD! on February 06, 2017, 03:09:25 PMI'm interested to hear what level of math has been competed by those who say 4 is greater, and vice versa.It really doesn't matter. This is a matter of logic, not math.The problem with your syllogism above is that you correlated 1.3 Μ with 4/3, which is false.They are exactly the same.
They're equal, it's just because we're working in base 10 which is rather flawed.What number would you add to 3.999... to get to 4?
No, it will always be infinitely less than than the number of decimal places needed, because you can't express 1/3 as a number. No matter how far you measure it, the "decimal form" (which shouldn't exist) of 1/3 will ALWAYS be less than the expression. You could go on eternally, for all of time and then some, and it would never, ever, ever be 1/3.
Look, this isn't hard. All I'm saying is that the decimal form of 1/3 (or any repeating numbers) don't exist in the physical world because the more you measured it, the bigger it would get. Look at conservation of matter to see why that's impossible.
If what you're stuck on is the "gets bigger" part (really?), then just look at how a repeating number works. The more you measure it (.333 vs .333333), the larger it becomes.
Quote from: Nasty Turkey. SAD! on February 06, 2017, 03:21:29 PMQuote from: SecondClass on February 06, 2017, 03:14:22 PMQuote from: Nasty Turkey. SAD! on February 06, 2017, 03:09:25 PMI'm interested to hear what level of math has been competed by those who say 4 is greater, and vice versa.It really doesn't matter. This is a matter of logic, not math.The problem with your syllogism above is that you correlated 1.3 Μ with 4/3, which is false.They are exactly the same.No, they aren't. .3 Μ will never be able to go on long enough to become a perfect third.
no, i thought the point was that there was literally no differencenot even a small onethey're identical numbers
god this is where my knowledge of calc would help but fuck calc 2 gave me cancer and ptsd to even bother explaining
Quote from: Naru on February 06, 2017, 03:41:47 PMgod this is where my knowledge of calc would help but fuck calc 2 gave me cancer and ptsd to even bother explainingEveryone says calc 3 is the hardest but calc 2 took me in a dark alley and fucked me like a little bitch.
Quote from: Nasty Turkey. SAD! on February 06, 2017, 06:19:05 PMQuote from: Naru on February 06, 2017, 03:41:47 PMgod this is where my knowledge of calc would help but fuck calc 2 gave me cancer and ptsd to even bother explainingEveryone says calc 3 is the hardest but calc 2 took me in a dark alley and fucked me like a little bitch.what makes it so difficult
i have the proof somewhere in my calc II notebook saying .999999 (repeating) is 1. but i doubt class would bother even seeing it
Quote from: Naru on February 07, 2017, 12:46:43 PMi have the proof somewhere in my calc II notebook saying .999999 (repeating) is 1. but i doubt class would bother even seeing itpost it for me then fampai
Quote from: LC on February 07, 2017, 12:47:52 PMQuote from: Naru on February 07, 2017, 12:46:43 PMi have the proof somewhere in my calc II notebook saying .999999 (repeating) is 1. but i doubt class would bother even seeing itpost it for me then fampaican i post it on discord? i dont wanna use imgur from my phone
Quote from: Naru on February 07, 2017, 12:48:26 PMQuote from: LC on February 07, 2017, 12:47:52 PMQuote from: Naru on February 07, 2017, 12:46:43 PMi have the proof somewhere in my calc II notebook saying .999999 (repeating) is 1. but i doubt class would bother even seeing itpost it for me then fampaican i post it on discord? i dont wanna use imgur from my phonesurei'm not part of the .999999... =/= 1 crowd, i just wanted to read it
Quote from: Naru on February 07, 2017, 12:46:43 PMi have the proof somewhere in my calc II notebook saying .999999 (repeating) is 1. but i doubt class would bother even seeing itFuck that, I want to understand how I'm wrong. I feel like the guy from the "kg of bricks and feathers"Spoiler
Quote from: Verbatim on February 06, 2017, 03:16:29 PMQuote from: SecondClass on February 06, 2017, 03:11:32 PMEVEN IF IT WAS ENDLESS, it does not equal 1/3. It will always have infinitely less decimal places than it needs to be 1/3.won't there will always be the precise number of decimal places neededbecause it's endlessQuoteIf you need clarification to the second paragraph, I don't know what to tell you.oh good, because i doyou tell me, "sorry for typing a sentence that reads like it was written by a 9 year old," and then you clarifyNo, it will always be infinitely less than than the number of decimal places needed, because you can't express 1/3 as a number. No matter how far you measure it, the "decimal form" (which shouldn't exist) of 1/3 will ALWAYS be less than the expression. You could go on eternally, for all of time and then some, and it would never, ever, ever be 1/3.