and it annoys me when people say 'oh the universe cannot be infinate, it just cant'.
yes it can.
infinity is a mathematical concept, and is impossible. fact
From what authority do you speak? What makes you think "maths can't deal with infinity"?So because maths can't deal with infinity it equals 1?
Well, it doesn't.
So because maths can't deal with infinity it equals 1?
Well, it doesn't.
No it can't.
Prove it![]()
It does deal with it, it denotes an unbounded limit. And 0.999... is proven rigorously to be the same real number as 1.
Well its your word against mine im affraid. I said it first, so you can prove it first![]()
From what authority do you speak? What makes you think "maths can't deal with infinity"?
I find that if you don't ask how everything within our reality came into being, then you have to accept that everything just 'is' and 'has always been'. I'm not sure what's more ridiculous, everything we know has been around forever with no starting point, or that someone put on their wizard robes and created everything in 7 days.
Can we have an infinite universe for example? The answer is no, the universe is finite. Stephen Hawking in 'A Brief History of Time' (1989 page 44) describes the universe as being "finite but unbounded". The simplest answer is that as the universe is known to be expanding, it cannot possibly be infinite. To be precise, the dictionary definition of the word universe is "all that is. The whole system of things." In this sense the universe is not expanding into anything other than itself, for whatever it is expanding into is part of the universe, there being nothing else but the universe. However, for the sake of simplicity, I am referring only to our Big Bang expanding universe as 'the universe'. (Even if you happen to disagree with the Big Bang theory, the term 'universe' will still have the same meaning here, as it refers to 'our' universe only, and does not include whatever may or may not exist outside of it.) I will try and explain a finite universe as some people understandably have problems with it.
I'm not sure I was clear - I know 1 and 0.9r represent exactly the same real number. I was asking the member Gilly, from what authority he speaks because he seems to think he knows better than the entire mathematical community, and their predecessors.0.99r = 1 is a limitation of our number system, nothing to do with "there can't be infinity".
I'm not sure I was clear - I know 1 and 0.9r represent exactly the same real number. I was asking the member Gilly, from what authority he speaks because he seems to think he knows better than the entire mathematical community, and their predecessors.
I'm not sure I was clear - I know 1 and 0.9r represent exactly the same real number.
I'm not sure I was clear - I know 1 and 0.9r represent exactly the same real number. I was asking the member Gilly, from what authority he speaks because he seems to think he knows better than the entire mathematical community, and their predecessors.
0.9r and 1 are not the same number, else they'd both be written the same way![]()
Indeed, if 0.9r is written to be less in value than one, then surely the logical conclusion is that... 0.9r is less that one?
Not that I'm a maths wizz or anything, naturally.