morphism said:
?
What CRGreathouse did was define operations on sets. What he wrote down isn't "potentially true", it's absolutely true. Under his definitions, {a}/{0} is not a real number, it's a set.
CRGreathouse said:
It took me a few readings, but I think I see what you're getting at. I'm not claiming that {a}/{0} is a real number (\{a\}/\{0\}\in\mathbb{R}) but that {a}/{0} is the set of real numbers (\{a\}/\{0\}=\mathbb{R}).
In fact, I showed that there's no real number to which {a}/{0} corresponds:
\not\exists e\in\mathbb{R}:\{a\}/\{0\}=\{e\}
yup, i needed to be prodded to read it again, carefully. what CRG said, with the notation he used (which i was not being careful with) is precisely true.
\{a\}/\{0\}=\mathbb{R} if a =0
hell, it could be \{a\}/\{0\}=\mathbb{C} if a = 0
which means that \{a\}/\{0\} is sort of meaningless since it cannot resolve to any smaller set of values other than
anything and
\{a\}/\{0\}=\emptyset if a \ne 0
which says that \{a\}/\{0\} can't be anything.
One case, a = 0, says that \{a\}/\{0\}
can be anything (but you don't have the foggiest which of the anything it is), while the other case a \ne 0, says that \{a\}/\{0\}
can't be anything. the former case means really that 0/0 leads to a loss of information that sometimes gets you into trouble (such as this famous flawed proof):
Let
a and
b be equal non-zero quantities
a = b
Multiply through by
a
a^2 = ab
Subtract b^2
a^2 - b^2 = ab - b^2
Factor both sides
(a - b)(a + b) = b(a - b)
Divide out (a - b)
a + b = b
Observing that a = b
b + b = b
Combine like terms on the left
2b = b
Divide by
b
2 = 1 \,and if 2 = 1, then 1 = 0, then \infty = 0, "yes" = "no", "right" = "wrong", Hitler was right all along, and George W. Bush really
is a legitimate and good U.S. president. The most righteous, honest, and competent U.S. president ever in U.S. history.
