Maybe there's some confusion here between a number and a representation of a number?
Would you agree that the number 1/2 equals the number 0.5 ? Even though the representation "1/2" clearly differs from the representation "0.5" ?
The thing that isn't infinitely large is a number. The thing that is infinitely long is a representation of a number.
What additional information could we learn about the number represented, from seeing all infinitely many digits of its decimal representation explicitly written out? (If that were possible. Which it obviously isn't.) We already know they're all going to be 9's, from seeing the very finite description: "a decimal point followed by infinitely many 9's".
Anyway, here's a cute little problem from What is Mathematics?, by Courant and Robbins: what's 0.333333... + 0.989898... ?
I think we have to agree on what is meant by "equals" in your question.
If you mean: Are " 1/2" and "0.5"
the same?
Then the answer is clearly "no". A glance is sufficient to distinguish them.
That's the symbolism question.
If what you mean is " Does the operation 'one divided by two' yield the number represented by the symbol '0.5' , then the answer is "yes".
In this example the distinction is trivial. But what about this one?
Does 1/3 = 0.33?
The practical answer is "It depends.Are we talking currency , or what?"
But that's a question about quantity.
If we are talking pure numbers, detached from the real world, the answer , surely , is "No- 1/3 is NOT the same as 0.3" or .33 or .333333
If now we simply
define 1/3 as being equal to (.333...) well, as AS says, you can't argue with an axiom in mathematics.
But you can and
must in the real world. The supposition that spirit exists is not one I am willing to admit at the start of a discussion on life after death. It's what is to be proved. We must question assumptions. We must look for paradox, or for evidence that supports or contradicts the assumption.
What is at issue is how the notion of .999...is derived. The infinity here is not the
magnitude of the number, but the
length of it's expression. There is an infinite number of "9" s implied in the definition. I completely agree with that. If the
magnitude of .999... was infinite, you and other (evidently sane) people would not be saying it is equal to 1.
My problem with infinities is that they seem to undermine the most fundamental axiom of arithmetic, namely that one integer only can be assigned to one item only creating a one to one mapping between item and integer. That is what counting is. If, when counting beans, I assign an uncountable number of integers to each bean , my total count will be meaningless. Yet this is exactly what infinities do.
Here I go on a bean count- 1, 2, 3,
I, 5, 6, 7 usw.
Now- how many beans have I got?
(Where
I stands for an infinity).
The
whole point of numbers is that they are used to count; I know I have a billion pennies if I can put a cardinal integer in sequence alongside each penny, each number one greater than its predecessor, and the last one is " one billion".
If we postulate a number which is uncountable, we short circuit the whole notion.
We can either have counting numbers or infinities, but not both in the same system.
Also, the universe does not supply evidence for infinities.
Remember the "black body catastrophe"?
Now here are my two open math questions:
1.
Does "number" when detached from quantity, retain actual meaning?
2. Are numbers themselves quantised?
The conventional defence in favour of infinities is that no matter how big a number, we can always add one more. Note that this assumes infinities to always be very
large numbers. (As opposed to very
small numbers, or simply "
uncountable" numbers). Why must this be?
If we redefine an infinity as a number which is simply
not countable, then there is no actual requirement for it to be a big number. For example, the number "x" is not countable. But does .999x = 1? I have no idea, because the "uncountable" definition does not carry the information required to get that answer.
Sorry if all this seems like / is total nonsense. It may well be. But The present idea of infinity seems to me to be as nonsensical as "spirit"- indeed possibly more so. This is why I do not accept that .999...=1, even while appreciating that the infinity in the expression is not one of magnitude.
I hope this does not seem too stupid.
And your question-
what's 0.333333... + 0.989898... ? You will appreciate, given my beliefs, that it would be sacreligious to attempt an answer. Indeed I demand you apologise for asking it. I propose to riot in the street and burn you in effigy.