Re: Easy question: WHICH LIST CONTAINS MORE DIGITS OF Pi?

From: josephus (dogbird_at_earthlink.net)
Date: 02/11/05


Date: Fri, 11 Feb 2005 04:54:54 GMT


|-|erc wrote:

> "Will Twentyman" <wtwentyman@read.my.sig> wrote in
>
>>>there is NO WAY..'how many digits of an infinite sequence' has any other answer
>>>than a direct quantity. QED.
>>
>>It depends on the clarity of the question in its entirety. For a
>>sufficiently clear question, there is a direct quantity answer (if you
>>include aleph_0 as a quantity).
>>
>
>
> no you dullard. HOW MANY DIGITS OF <12223123...>
>
> has been rephrased 30 times for you and every time youi've said
>
> 'any finite per row', when ROW has nothing to do with the subject of the question.
>
>
>
> HOW LONG IS A PIECE OF STRING WILL?
>
> 30 times I've rephrased it and got 200 answers FINITE.
>
> You are a pack of liars and there is no point in you justifying the mob in front of the mob.
>
> Herc
>
>
>
You are crazy. We know this. So we cut you some slack and try to explain
  in terms you can understand. It has to do with the definition of an
infinitesimal. For any line (string if you will) the length is exactly
equal to the mapping set of integers. Aleph0. This is the hard
definition not an approximate definition. It is independent of the
length. ALL one dimensional lines have this property. All references
to a countable set is limited to Alpha0.

I said your string is mapped to a one dimensional line of length Aleph0
times infinitesimal = a length of one line (string), yours.

         Any mathematician can verify this. (Please correct any false
statements)
             unlike Herc I ask to corrected.
                josephus



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