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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
infinity - What is the definition of an infinite sequence . . . Except for $0$ every element in this sequence has both a next and previous element However, we have an infinite amount of elements between $0$ and $\omega$, which makes it different from a classical infinite sequence So what exactly makes an infinite sequence an infinite sequence? Are the examples I gave even infinite sequences?
Infinite monkey theorem and numbers - Mathematics Stack Exchange I had a discussion with a friend about the monkey infinite theorem, the theorem says that a monkey typing randomly on a keyboard will almost surely produce any given books (here let's say the bible
set theory - Hilberts Grand Hotel is always hosting the same infinite . . . From an excellent answer here, I gather that 1 is taken to mean that the hotel is hosting an infinite set of guests and that 2 means things have changed, we now have to reassign every room again to accommodate a new infinite set of guests (eg: the ones before + 1) I saw other threads and answers But the "new" set is just the same old set
elementary set theory - What is the definition for an infinite set . . . However, while Dedekind-infinite implies your notion even without the Axiom of Choice, your definition does not imply Dedekind-infinite if we do not have the Axiom of Choice at hand: your definition is what is called a "weakly Dedekind-infinite set", and it sits somewhere between Dedekind-infinite and finite; that is, if a set is Dedekind
Types of infinity - Mathematics Stack Exchange Not only infinite - it's "so big" that there is no infinite set so large as the collection of all types of infinity (in Set Theoretic terms, the collection of all types of infinity is a class, not a set) You can easily see that there are infinite types of infinity via Cantor's theorem which shows that given a set A, its power set P (A) is strictly larger in terms of infinite size (the
Does infinite equal infinite? - Mathematics Stack Exchange All three integrals are divergent and infinite and have the regularized value zero, but two of them are equal but not equal to the third one In other cases of divergent integrals or series, the regularized value and or growth rate (germ at infinity) or behavior at a singularity can differ as well or the differences can compensate for each
What is the difference between infinite and transfinite? Infinite simply means "not finite", both in the colloquial sense and in the technical sense (where we first define the term "finite") There is no technical definition that I am aware of for "transfinite" Nevertheless, I can attest to my personal use Transfinite is good when there is a notion of order, so "transfinite ordinal", or when you want to talk about non-standard real numbers which