doronshadmi
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2008
- Messages
- 13,320
By a non-existent amount? Ok, so there is no difference.
It is not an amount, it is a structure (a non-local one).
By a non-existent amount? Ok, so there is no difference.
So what is between lim(0) and 0?
My 'statement' was a quote from the linked 'One Mathematics' http://www.cs.elte.hu/~lovasz/berlin.pdf
It was that single call for unification of mathematics by Mr. Lovasz.
You did not recognize it and started arguing against it.
What does it mean when you read X, don't recognise it as a quote from something you yourself posted as supporting your ideas, then start arguing against it?Quoting X is not necessarily Getting X.
What does it mean when you read X, don't recognise it as a quote from something you yourself posted as supporting your ideas, then start arguing against it?
Just when I start to think you've exhausted all the possible ways to be wrong ... you pull a classic like this!
Are you watching, MosheKlein?
infinity ??? One ??? over ???
infinity ??? One ??? over ???
One over infinity. In other words, 1 divided by infinity. (Not infinity plus one.)
1/infinity has nothing to to with the structural fact that no amount of k-dim elements can fully cover a 1-dim element.
Furthermore, we can't break structure 1 into more than one piece and still claim that these pieces are the same as the 1 structure, before we broke it into pieces.
So as you see, exactly because of this structural difference no amount of k-dims can fully cover n-dim.
So, where are the gaps? Where on a 1-dim line do you not find a 0-dim point?
To continue the other part of the discussion, if you divide 1 by 3, then multiply by 3, what is your answer?
This is not the case by the Organic paradigm, where 0.999…[based 10] is considered as a non-local number and 1 is considered as local number of "0.999…[base 10] < 1" expression..
if you divide 1 by 3, then multiply by 3, what is your answer?
1/3 * 3 = 1
0.999… / 3 * 3 = 0.999…
0-dim:3 or 0-dim/3 is exactly the same building-block that can be on one and only one location along a 1-dim building-block.
1-dim:3 or 1-dim/3 is exactly the same building-block that can be in more than a one location along a 1-dim building-block.
So the operation has no significance as long as we deal with atoms, whether they are local or not.
At the moment that you understand that "…1" of the expression "0.000…1" is a 1-dim atom, then and only then you are able to understand
"0.999…[base 10] < 1" expression.
Again, 1-dim/∞ ≠ 0-dim exactly because:
n=1 to ∞
k= n-1 to ∞
Any n-dim is non-local with respect to any amount of k-dim elements because: given n-dim element, there are infinitely many k-dim elements on it such that k-dimA ≠ k-dimB ≠ k-dimC …, where ≠ is an example of n-dim domain, which is not covered by any k-dim element. If some claims against this assertion then he has to avoid ≠. But then there is at most one and only one k-dim elements on the n-dim element. By carefully investigate the dimensions' example it is discovered that ≠ is equivalent to n-dim, and it is clearly shown that Non-locality and Locality are different mathematical spaces that are associated but not defined by or made of each other, similarly to two axioms. This example can be used without loss of generality in many mathematical branches, and this generalization actually provides a non-trivial way for "One Mathematics" [1], which we call "The Organic Unity of The Mathematical Science" [2].
[1] L. Lovasz: One Mathematics http://www.cs.elte.hu/~lovasz/berlin.pdf .
[2] Moshe Klein, Doron Shadmi: Organic Mathematics, International Journal of Pure and
Applied Mathematics, volume 49 No. 3 2008, 329-340
http://www.geocities.com/complementarytheory/IJPAM-OM.pdf