Paul Dirac
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Thanks!
The discussion revolves around the concept of infinity and whether its reciprocal can be considered as zero. Participants explore this topic through various mathematical contexts, including calculus, nonstandard analysis, and extended real numbers, examining the implications and limitations of treating infinity as a number.
Participants generally agree that infinity is not a number, but there are multiple competing views on how to handle its reciprocal in different mathematical frameworks. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the treatment of infinity and its implications.
Limitations include the dependence on definitions of infinity, the context in which infinity is being discussed, and the unresolved nature of certain mathematical steps related to infinity and its reciprocal.
axmls said:The first thing I'd say is that infinity is not a number, and so it doesn't make sense to talk about its reciprocal. In the context of calculus, we can refer to a limit, namely that \lim_{x \to \infty} \frac{1}{x} = 0
That is to say, as x gets larger and larger, this term gets closer and closer to 0, but there is no real number called infinity that we can manipulate like a number.
Now, if I recall correctly, in the context of nonstandard analysis, you can technically call the reciprocal of infinity a "differential" (given certain assumptions), but this is avoided in standard analysis (the standard calculus that we use). When talking about infinities, we are typically dealing with limits.
See post #4Pjpic said:This may not apply, but here's a quote from Wiki:
As mentioned above, zero, the origin, requires special consideration in the circle inversion mapping. The approach is to adjoin a point at infinity designated ∞ or 1/0 .