But you're the best at math here
Quote from: GodspeedGojira! on November 06, 2014, 10:23:54 PMQuote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:21:16 PMBut you're the best at math hereBut that's wrong, the guy I'm turkey-signalling holds that spotRc or Piranha?
Quote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:21:16 PMBut you're the best at math hereBut that's wrong, the guy I'm turkey-signalling holds that spot
Quote from: RC5908 on November 06, 2014, 10:30:12 PMQuote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:27:52 PMQuote from: GodspeedGojira! on November 06, 2014, 10:23:54 PMQuote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:21:16 PMBut you're the best at math hereBut that's wrong, the guy I'm turkey-signalling holds that spotRc or Piranha?HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH no im good at math, but nowhere near those guy's levelsWhat did you get on the math portion of your SAT again? If a 630 puts me in the 85th percentile, then you're probably in the 98th.
Quote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:27:52 PMQuote from: GodspeedGojira! on November 06, 2014, 10:23:54 PMQuote from: DeeJ on November 06, 2014, 10:21:16 PMBut you're the best at math hereBut that's wrong, the guy I'm turkey-signalling holds that spotRc or Piranha?HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH no im good at math, but nowhere near those guy's levels
wuuuut
Fuck you and your faggot numbers.
Cantor's argument tl;dr:It's a proof by contradiction by showing that the set of of all real numbers {R} is not countable. Proof by contradiction is done by assuming the opposite and showing it couldn't be true. Because {R} is therefore uncountable, it must be larger than any countable set. There are different sizes of infinite sets, but any infinite set is larger [has a larger cardinality, to use the correct term] than any countable set. The set of all natural numbers has cardinality aleph-null (along with any other countable set). So knowing this, Cantor set up his proof by making a hypothetical set of this form:{.d11d12d12...,.d21d22d33...,...,.dn1, dn2,...}, Except he made it a chart like this: __n______|__number__ 1 | .d11d12... 2 | .d21d22d23... 3 | .d31d32d33d34...On the left is the order of the set that the number on the left is in. Left is natural and countable. Right is real and uncountable. You make the contradiction by trying to show that the numbers in this list have a one-to-one correspondence with real numbers (as that would show they have the same cardinality). Cantor found this number to be:m = 0.(.d11+1)(d22+1)...(dnn+1)Basically just the diagonal numbers from the previous list in a set, increased by 1. If they were of the same cardinality you'd be able to find m inside the previous set, but you can't. This might sound stupid, because obviously you could just add 1 to the old set like we did to the subset of diagonals, but doing so would just create a new set of diagonals and the contradiction remains true.Set theory isn't really my forte despite being one of my favorite subjects. Mr. Sexy has a good summary, too.This is awesome:Spoiler