The repeating nines situation is a great example of where two things might have the same value, but still be different. This type of stuff happens all the time in real life.
For example: I might own a business and render you a service. The service costs a thousand dollars. I prefer cash on the barrel head, but you hand me a credit card. I take the credit card, run the charge and consider that good. Paying me with cash or credit has the same effect. It balances the account between us.
A month later, I get some pathetic late night call from you. Being a nice guy, I rush down to the courthouse and bail out that deadbeat brother of yours. I write a thousand dollar check. You come to my place of business an hour later and hand me your credit card to pay your bill.
This time, however, I am livid. A credit card balanced the account in the past. This time I am yelling at you. What is wrong with me? Didn't I say cash and credit were equivalent? $1000 = $1000.
Our could it be that there is a difference between the two figures? The two numbers might have the same value but still be different. As you probably know, merchants have to pay a service fee to run credit card charges. Business people eat the fee as a cost of doing business, but in a straight cash transfer, there is no margin. Equal values aren't always the same.
I believe that the mystery of calculus is better understood in the old Aristotelian sense of potential infinity. The summation of summation of 9/10 + 9/100 + 9/1000 ... is something different than one...although they have the same value. For that matter, it is probably this having the same value while being different that makes calculus work.
Hi Kevin,
ReplyDeleteI would like to discuss a proposal with you. My email can be found at the following web page: http://thenewcalculus.weebly.com
Press CTRL+F and search for the word "contact".
First of all, the following link debunks all the 0.999...=1 proofs:
http://thenewcalculus.weebly.com/uploads/5/6/7/4/5674177/proof_that_0.999_not_equal_1.pdf
Secondly, I am interested to know of what your ideas regarding calculus are. You may or may not know that I discovered the New Calculus.
It is refreshing to find a rational individual who does not subscribe to passive listening. I hope to hear fro you soon. Please use private email as I do not like to communicate on blogs.