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Quote by: ZNFYRH By referencing the totality of infinity. |
Isn't "totality" contradicting to infinity?
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Quote by: ZNFYRH How many times does infinity go into infinity? Once.
∞ / ∞ = 1 |
Infinity should have no limit as to what it can hold. Why not two infinities? Three?
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Quote by: ZNFYRH How large is a segment if you divide something into an infinite number of segments? Not zero.
1 / ∞ != 0 |
How do you divide something an infinite number of times? If not zero, what is it? If you give ANY number other than zero, you'll be describing infinity as a FINITE number because you can now define INF by setting it to X and solving *example*. If you give zero, you'll be saying it's possible to make numbers or objects in the real world disappear entirely, denying the laws of physics (matter cannot be created or destroyed) by simply dividing it, which also goes against the definition of division.
*example* 1/∞=X [] ∞=1/X If x=any number other than zero, you've now found the exact number for infinity. That's crazy talk. *example*
Math says 100/∞ * ∞/100 = 1. Or at least it should.
∞/100 MUST be infinity. If you give ANY other number.. you can find the specific number of infinity by multiplying you answer by 100. This, of course, is absurd.
What times infinity is equal to 1?
ALL numbers times infinity equals infinity.
Thus the equation is absurd and infinity cannot be treated as a number.
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Quote by: ZNFYRH (!= means "not equal to"... learned that in the other thread and =/= looks weird) |
!= is classic C programming

That's where it comes from.
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Quote by: ZNFYRH How many times does nothing go into nothing? Forever.
0 / 0 = ∞ |
Infinity is equal to zero?