This is true, given the standard way of topologising the extended reals.
Well I was thinking of how one can write as though it is a numberThis is true, given the standard way of topologising the extended reals.
(In fact it is trivially true for any topology, but one does need a topology / definition of convergence before such a statement makes sense.)
Yes, because the notion of a limit on the extended reals need not satisfy all of the properties of taking limits on the reals.Well I was thinking of how one can write as though it is a number
If it were a number, we could do a numerous things that would give us contradictions
For example
So its clear that one cannot treat as some sort of number, rather the way it looks like to me, the statement
has is indefinite, since there is no defined limiting point
Am I wrong in my thinking?
From my brief knowledge of infinities, there is also anYes, because the notion of a limit on the extended reals need not satisfy all of the properties of taking limits on the reals.
To talk about limits and convergence, all you need is a set and a topology on it.
And your last line further assumes that the extended reals are a field, so we can divide by infinity. There isn't really a sensible field structure on the extended reals though.
Ps, when we do define multiplication on the extended reals, we do in fact have infinity/2=infinity.
Well not quite, the reals have cardinality strictly greater than that of the natural numbers, and hence so do the extended reals.From my brief knowledge of infinities, there is also an
Is the infinity that you say is: "the notion of a limit on the extended reals need not satisfy all of the properties of taking limits on the reals."
The same as ?
I always thought to be simply saying, "increase indefinitely", and not actually "infinity" itself