๐งต math is a meth
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:24:26 UTC No. 16101702
1+1=2 is false because nothing is ever exactly like another thing in the real world.
What math rules are there out there, nerds...
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:25:22 UTC No. 16101708
>>16101702
>nothing is ever exactly like another thing in the real world.
atoms of same element are
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:29:03 UTC No. 16101716
>>16101708
no, there are different components of each one
why do idiot basedentists steal billions to make CERN then?
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:34:27 UTC No. 16101724
>>16101716
>different components of each one
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:46:44 UTC No. 16101757
>>16101724
he might be right
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:52:42 UTC No. 16101773
>>16101702
Wrong because they can be the same without being congruent
i.e. they are equivalent in their measure.
take for instance the 0 function, the integral is zero now add a finite point of nonzero discontinuity, still zero integral.
Hey you should try reading topology, that might help.
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:56:00 UTC No. 16101779
>>16101757
so one proton can be made out of something completely different than any another proton?
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:56:35 UTC No. 16101782
>>16101773
On the nanoscale, this is not true
also zero doesn't exist so how are you going to measure it
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 19:58:48 UTC No. 16101788
>>16101779
so one molecule can be made out of something completely different than any another molecule ?
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 20:03:46 UTC No. 16101798
>>16101788
what? molecules can have handedness depending on structure. how are you comparing protons to fucking molecules, and why?
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 20:07:26 UTC No. 16101808
>>16101798
old scientists thought that all molecules were the same
Anonymous at Thu, 28 Mar 2024 20:26:27 UTC No. 16101843
OP makes a good point and I've always thought the same.
Mathematics goes so far trying to explain reality but it's obvious it can't be right. Math is abstraction, simplification of reality that works... With a margin of error.
If you go too deep into math, the margin of error grows so much that it's nonsensical to try to apply it to explain reality.
Irreal numbers, really?
1+1=2
You won't find a case like that in nature.
Even 1 H atom + 1 H atom are going to have some unexpected reaction if you "add them together.
There is no 1 thing exactly equal to another. Atoms of a same element will have different positions, entanglements, or whatever different properties that we've to discover yet.
I agree with OP.