If someone came up to me and presented a proof that 1=2, l would immediately discard the proof. The OP obviously didn't present something that ridiculous but it does amount to saying that the prove Cantor gave was wrong as it proves the opposite.There isn't a third possibility here. It isn't about herd mentality here since it is mathematics.In mathematics, we stand on the shoulders of giants and it does not tolerate any weakness that we find in philosophy, religion or social sciences. I understand where you are coming from but you have to see for yourself that in this sub section, we need to be more objective and avoid beating around the bush as we normally do — Wittgenstein
If someone came up to me and presented a proof that 1=2, l would immediately discard the proof. — Wittgenstein
That's what this should be about. Either all the mathematicians since Cantor have been idiots and retarded to not notice the fatal flaw in the proof or OP is wrong. What's the probability for each case. — Wittgenstein
How? — tim wood
Pi would just have a never ending trail of digits but the procedure is exactly the same. That's just an infinite binary string.Cantors argument relies on numbers with infinite numbers of decimals and thats what he uses in his argument as well so if you want to cobble me for that then you have to cobble Cantor as well.Cantors argument specifically relies on having infinite strings with his slash argument. It wont work with finite strings because these can all be converted into rational fractions which we can listGreat! Now try π. — tim wood
Great! Now try π. — tim wood
Well as far as I can tell any number fed into this procedure should result in a terminating rational length which will produce a set of rationals which map to the natural numbers regardless of whether it is an irrational number or not. — Umonsarmon
Now I understand the point that you could argue that the set your feeding in is uncountable but this leaves us in a strange position because the two proofs directly contradict. — Umonsarmon
1)First convert all numbers into binary strings. — Umonsarmon
2)Draw a square and a line down the middle — Umonsarmon
3) Starting at the middle line do the following .If the digit in your string is a 1 move half the distance to the next line to the right. If the digit is a 0 move half the distance to the next line to the left. — Umonsarmon
Each binary number will terminate on its own unique rational a/b as will each irrational number — Umonsarmon
It would converge on a rational number just as the sequence 1/2+1/4+1/8 converges on 1 after an infinite number of steps. — Umonsarmon
It would converge on a rational number just as the sequence 1/2+1/4+1/8 converges on 1 after an infinite number of steps. — Umonsarmon
if I do that infinetley it should end up on a rational numbe — Umonsarmon
If we cut through all of the banter it all boils down to whether you believe that a rational number + or - a rational number equals a rational number. — Umonsarmon
No matter how many times I perform that operation it will always result in a rational number. — Umonsarmon
I would just use a -a/b value and then list that next to its a/b twin — Umonsarmon
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