withoutaface
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I was wondering if there is any way to prove that oo+1=oo other than 'by convention'. I've included my attempt which is probably wrong, so yeah, any takers?
I know that, but that's why I'm so interested in finding out.Xayma said:Infinity isn't a number, it is a concept, your trying to combine numbers and concepts which dont like being combined.
what the? what is this bi... jection? not to worry... i got my trusty merriam-webster... eureka!!!Archman said:well you can form a bijection between the set of positive integers and the set of non-negative integers, i guess thats enough.
it's more than a limit sometimes.. such as the sizes/cardinality of some sets.wogboy said:Strictly speaking ∞ is only allowed as a limit, at the end of an arrow e.g. lim{x -> ∞} 1/x, not in an equation nor an expression e.g. ∞ + 1
No they are not equal thou both are infinitely countable sets. They are NOT equal for sure. Two sets are bijection does not necessary mean they are equal. Read your sources again. In fact post your sources.Iota said:Consider the set of all cardinal numbers:
{1,2,3,4,5...}
This set has a one-to-one relationship with the set
{2,4,6,8,10...}
Each element in the set matches. Hence, we can say that the two sets are equal.
wtf? 2*inf = inf? so 2*inf - inf = inf - inf? so inf = 0Iota said:2*inf = inf
"Equal" was a bad term to use, but since the target audience is not university students, equal is what I stick by. The correct term is "one-to-one correspondence".gman03 said:No they are not equal thou both are infinitely countable sets. They are NOT equal for sure. Two sets are bijection does not necessary mean they are equal. Read your sources again. In fact post your sources.
It's called TRANSfinite arithmetic for a reason. It doesn't obey normal mathematics.wtf? 2*inf = inf? so 2*inf - inf = inf - inf? so inf = 0
I am sorry for that, as I have nary even a trifle of desire to "ruin the art of mathematics". However, I aslo believe I am not doing so, since I am only showing you a mathematical concept which you are not familiar with. Is this wrong of me?I so damn dislike you, you are ruining the art of mathematics.... what you have typed is called <b>false implies true</b>
Oh, you can to some degree. And George Cantor proved this. Just remember that "normal" arithmetic laws are not the same as transfinite arithmetic laws.Wogboy is right, you can't put numbers and concepts into equation.
Nope there is nothing wrong with you demonstrating concepts. However I believe there is some problems associated with your understanding of such concept.Iota said:I am only showing you a mathematical concept which you are not familiar with. Is this wrong of me?
and from http://cs.wwc.edu/~aabyan/CII/BOOK/book/node42.html (42 )Iota said:Consider the set of all cardinal numbers:
{1,2,3,4,5...}
This set has a one-to-one relationship with the set
{2,4,6,8,10...}
clearly you misunderstand some part of it. And I was a little bit piss about that. THat just my attitude, please do not take offense from my capital letters and bold letter. I apologise.the set of all subsets of the integers <b>cannot</b> be put in one-to-one correspondence with the integers, that this set is really a different size of infinite set, truly larger
You tooIota said:Have a nice day.