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".
I think we pretty much agree here, although I would phrase it differently. The question isn't what "equals" means---it means: really, really, exactly the same. No, no, even the samer than that. The question rather is, what do I mean when I write stuff with quote marks around it, and what do I mean when I write it without any quotes?
When I write stuff with quotes around it, I'm referring to the sequence of letters/digits/symbols within the quotes; when I write stuff without quotes around it, the stuff is supposed to be the name of something, or a description of something, and I'm referring to whatever it names or describes.
For example, if I write 'a red house', I'm talking about a physical building, but if I write 'a red "house"', I'm talking about something like this:
house
So the idea is that "1/2" and "0.5" are two different names for the same number. And "1/4" and "0.25" are both names for some other number. Etc.
What these numbers
are exactly, which have names like "0.5" and "0.25", is not an easy question to answer. Possibly, the most philosophically defensible position is that actually there aren't any such things. But it's convenient to pretend that we're talking
about something, rather than that we're just talking. So that's what people do.
Until some down-to-earth guy such as yourself comes along and starts asking hard questions.
Actually, the modern approach is to define numbers in terms of set theory. But that just pushes the question down a level; it doesn't get rid of it. We may have a satisfactory definition of numbers---they're certain sets---but now we have to answer the question, what are sets? Do sets
really exist, whatever that means? I know of no conclusive answer. Platonists say that sets really exist; formalists say that all that really exists are the statements we make, which apparently are about sets but which really aren't about anything, because there aren't any such things as sets for them to be about.
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.
I'm not sure what you mean by "quantity".
I don't think it's ever right to say that 1/3 equals 0.33. The definition of 1/3 is that three of them together make 1. But three times 0.33 isn't 1; it's 0.99.
If you're thinking about figuring tax on a dollar, or something like that, the rule isn't in fact that the tax is 1/3 of the amount. Rather, the rule is something like, "the tax is 1/3 of the amount, rounded to the nearest penny; but if it's exactly halfway between two pennies, then round to the one that's even".
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.
Yes, absolutely. It's good to ask questions.
In some sense, we do, as you say, simply define 1/3 as being equal to 0.333... . But in another sense, this definition is not the least bit arbitrary. We really don't have any choice in the matter. If "0.333..." is to represent any number at all, it has got to represent 1/3. And if 1/3 is to have any decimal representation at all, its decimal representation has got to be "0.333...".
Suppose you take a metrestick, and make a mark exactly one third of the way from one end. (Yes, I know it would be much easier if you used a yardstick. That's not the point, ok?

) The mark will be between 333 mm and 334 mm from the end. That is, between 0.333 m and 0.334 m. So, the exact distance in meters has to be 0.333
something. Now, regardless of what the
something is, it can't make the number less than 0.333 nor can it make the number greater than 0.334, right? Even if the
something goes on forever, so what? The digits way out there represent only tiny, tiny distances along the metrestick; and the farther out they are, the tinier are the distances that they represent. So there's no need to worry greatly about the fact that there might be infinitely many of them. They won't add up to much, even all infinitely many of them together, because they get ever and ever tinier.
In fact, they will add up to ... drumroll, please ... exactly 1/3.

But we haven't gotten to that yet.
(to be continued. I'm getting tired.)
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.
[...]
(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.
(But in the meantime, can you clarify what you mean by "uncountable"? I have no idea what sort of thing you're thinking of. The terms "countable" and "uncountable" have specific technical meanings in set theory, but you don't appear to be talking about those. [Set theory not only deals with infinity, it deals with many different sizes of infinity---infinitely many, in fact. Some of the smaller ones are called "countable". The bigger ones are all called "uncountable".])
Sorry if all this seems like / is total nonsense. It may well be. [...] I hope this does not seem too stupid.
Hey, don't apologise. People had trouble with infinity for thousands of years. Cantor only figured it out like 100 years ago. And that was just the basics. More stuff has been done even more recently than that. So it's not so easy.
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.
Right. I'll make you a deal. I'll apologise for asking it if you answer it.
