Could you reword your mind in order to get the ever smaller, which is logically irreducible to the smallest?
I thought you would be interested in that YouTube demonstration of creating a curve by drawing some of its slopes. Combined with "real math," it shows that a line segment whose length is approaching zero can be regarded as a point. That YouTube video treats the construction as an optical effect, but I did a short follow up. You draw two Cartesian co-ordinates both 10 units long and divide them on equidistant segments 1 unit in length and then connect the points as shown bellow.
The connecting lines create a near curve, which is a collection of ten straight lines where the red points are the points of intersection of the slope lines that lie on the curve. Since the curve is a collection of measurable straight lines, it's easy to estimate the length of the curve when it becomes smooth by simply measuring the distances from point to point and adding them together.
Measured combined length = 15.885793
In order to smooth the curve, you don't really need to divide both coordinates on many more segments -- a fairly simple use of parametric equations will utilize the coordinates of the red points, so you can derive the function of the curve. You can see the function that draws the curve that is now "infinitely smooth" bellow.
The function of the curve is equivalent to the procedure where you divide both coordinates on infinitely many segments and repeat the construction above, which is hardly possible. But the division establishes the length of each segment on the coordinates.
[lim n → ∞] 10/n = 0
The above tells you that the length of each line segment is approaching zero and you are free to treat each segment as a point. The same goes for the curve, which is now a collection of line segments whose number is approaching infinity. All you need to do is to measure each segment and add them together to get the length of the curve. That's not really possible, coz the number of those line segments is infinite. But there is that "Mathew Theorem":
Theorem 19:26
Jesus looked at them (it) and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
And so you need to integrate:
Length of the curve = √2
0 ∫
10√ ((-22 (√ (44x + 1) + 44x +243)/(44x + 1)) dx = 15.900219...
Now compare the computed length whose precision is approaching infinity with the measured length, which was 15.885793. Not much of a difference, is it?
Point #1 is that you can't compute the length of a curve without defining it and treat it as a collection of line segments whose number is approaching infinity where the length of each segment is approaching zero.
Point #2 is that solving problems may require special definition and treatment of the objects that the problem is made of to get the job done. The mathematicians in the beginning of the 20th century attempted to put math "under one God" but Kurt Godel, that is Kurt GODel, showed them that it wasn't possible. And that's my contribution to the fallacies in the Bible by disproving the already mentioned "theorem":
Jesus looked at them (it) and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
Mathew
19:26
In 1926 he transferred to mathematics and coincidentally became a member of the M. Schlick circle.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/2273764
Wow! That's pretty good, "heavenly father." Keep manipulating and don't forget to send down some more stuff... LOL.
Cantor believed his theory of transfinite numbers had been communicated to him by God
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georg_Cantor
CANtor GODel TEACH MATH?
The rational dogma of the 21st century says, "no way!"