- What is infinity divided by infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
I know that $\\infty \\infty$ is not generally defined However, if we have 2 equal infinities divided by each other, would it be 1? if we have an infinity divided by another half-as-big infinity, for
- Can I subtract infinity from infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Can this interpretation ("subtract one infinity from another infinite quantity, that is twice large as the previous infinity") help us with things like limn → ∞(1 + x n)n, or is it just a parlor trick for a much easier kind of limit?
- Proof of infinite monkey theorem. - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The infinite monkey theorem states that if you have an infinite number of monkeys each hitting keys at random on typewriter keyboards then, with probability 1, one of them will type the complete works of William Shakespeare
- Uncountable vs Countable Infinity - Mathematics Stack Exchange
My friend and I were discussing infinity and stuff about it and ran into some disagreements regarding countable and uncountable infinity As far as I understand, the list of all natural numbers is
- calculus - Infinite Geometric Series Formula Derivation - Mathematics . . .
Infinite Geometric Series Formula Derivation Ask Question Asked 12 years, 2 months ago Modified 4 years, 4 months ago
- What exactly is infinity? - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The infinite manifold of two or three dimensions, the mathematical beings which depend on a number of variables greater even than three, any number in fact, still have no greater power than the linear continuum
- elementary set theory - What do finite, infinite, countable, not . . .
A set A A is infinite, if it is not finite The term countable is somewhat ambiguous (1) I would say that countable and countably infinite are the same That is, a set A A is countable (countably infinite) if there exists a bijection between A A and N N (2) Other people would define countable to be finite or in bijection with N N
- I have learned that 1 0 is infinity, why isnt it minus infinity?
An infinite number? Kind of, because I can keep going around infinitely However, I never actually give away that sweet This is why people say that 1 0 "tends to" infinity - we can't really use infinity as a number, we can only imagine what we are getting closer to as we move in the direction of infinity
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