Proving 0/0 ≠ 1: Does Math Really Work This Way?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of 0/0 and whether it is indeterminate or equal to 1. A friend presents two arguments to support her theory that 0/0=1, but the other person disagrees and asks for help in proving her wrong. The conversation also delves into the concept of factorials and limits, with one person attempting to use L'Hopital's rule to show that 0/0=1. However, it is pointed out that this is not a valid argument and there is no theorem that supports this conclusion. The conversation ends with the person still unsure of how to prove their friend wrong.
  • #36
If it causes no particular trouble and 0/0 = a, for some a we don't know (one might some undefined a but nevermind). Then how can we be sure 0/0 = 0/0? And if equality isn't so simple then surely it does cause trouble!
 
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  • #37
AndersHermansson said:
Since a/b=c/d iff a*d=c*b,

Have you ever looked into a rigorous construction of the rationals from the integers? You take all pairs of integers (a,b) where b is non-zero, (a,b) intended to represent a/b, and define the equivalence relation you have above, (a,b)~(c,d) iff ad=bc. Key here is b is by definition non-zero. If you allowed b to be zero you'll run into many problems, so (a,0) is not allowed to represent a fraction for any a and we leave it undefined.

If you want to allow 0/0=a for all a (which would happen if we allowed (0,0) above) then -1=0/0=1, in fact everything ends up equal. Or you would have to admit that your = relation is no longer transitive, which will put you in a world of hurt.
 
  • #39
MathWorld said:
For example, a limit of the form 0/0 ...

I think this is the biggest reason for confusion -- people hear "indeterminate form" for this kind of limit form, but make the mistake of thinking that the label is referring to this arithmetic expression, rather than to the form of a limit.
 
  • #40
0/0 turns up pretty regularly in almost all levels of math. I was helping a trig student verify some trig identities and they were asked to show that: sin(x)/tan(x) = cos(x). But that isn’t true because sin(x)/tan(x) isn’t defined at 0 and cos(x) is.
 
  • #41
AndersHermansson said:
I guess it blows down to what you want undefined to mean, exactly. I get your point about uniqueness. Only I wouldn't call it undefined, since something undefined is just something that lacks definition. And this particular expression can be defined this way and not cause any trouble ...

Something isn't undefined because it can't be defined; it's undefined because it's not defined. Since 0/0 has no defined value, it is therefore undefined. The fact that defining it doesn't break as many rules as defining 1/0 would doesn't really change that.
 
  • #42
Ok, thanks for all the interresting responses. I will delve deeper into this!
 
  • #43
Hurkyl said:
I think this is the biggest reason for confusion -- people hear "indeterminate form" for this kind of limit form, but make the mistake of thinking that the label is referring to this arithmetic expression, rather than to the form of a limit.

Yes! It seems I have to think about this some more. Thank you =)
 

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