Just thinking
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 5,169
Well, everyone else is also certaily welcomed to comment too:
We all know that the accepted answer to the square root of negative one is i; and that this begins a numberline perpendicular to the Real Number numberline (Imaginary Numbers). But just exactly what is defined as being the square root of i? (Or -i?) Is this too an imaginary number, or does it constitute constructing yet a third numberline perpendicular to the other two? And thus require a new field (and name) of numbers? Has a problem in the real world ever required the value of the square root of i? And then what happens if we look for the square root of that new number? (I'll stop now as my head is about to explode.)
We all know that the accepted answer to the square root of negative one is i; and that this begins a numberline perpendicular to the Real Number numberline (Imaginary Numbers). But just exactly what is defined as being the square root of i? (Or -i?) Is this too an imaginary number, or does it constitute constructing yet a third numberline perpendicular to the other two? And thus require a new field (and name) of numbers? Has a problem in the real world ever required the value of the square root of i? And then what happens if we look for the square root of that new number? (I'll stop now as my head is about to explode.)