Liste des Groupes | Revenir à s math |
On 18.09.2024 22:49, Moebius wrote:How can you have infinity many unit fractions if there IS a smallest one. From that smallest one, take its reciprical, and that tells you how many unit fractions you have.Am 18.09.2024 um 21:35 schrieb Chris M. Thomasson:How can infinitely many points be accumulated without a first one? This belief proves that matheology is mistaken.On 9/18/2024 5:44 AM, WM wrote:>On 16.09.2024 03:16, Richard Damon wrote:On 9/15/24 3:39 PM, WM wrote:>On 15.09.2024 18:38, Ben Bacarisse wrote:>
>It might be worth pointing out that any non-trivial interval [a, b] on>
the real line (i.e. with b > a) contains an uncountable number of
points.
That proves that small intervals cannot be defined (they are dark).
But arbitrary small intervals CAN be defined.
>
Try to name one that can't.
Define an interval comprising 9182024 points, starting at zero.
There IS NO "interval comprising 9182024 points", hence NOTHING TO DEFINE HERE,
Regards, WM
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.