master_coda said:
That's an interesting approach, but it still doesn't support the idea that the measurement must use 1 as the base unit of length. You can't just suggest a technique for measuring and then grandly assert something about all systems of measurement. Especially when you're so inconsistent in your arguments; you agree that we can't make exact measurements of the "true values" of things, but then you assert that we can just arbitrarily declare integer based measurements to be exact, and then immediately afterwards you assert that we can't do the same thing using the value of pi without giving any actual reason for this restriction.
I don't see my arguments as being inconsistent. I simply tried to use your way of thinking to explain what I was talking about.
My argument is simple: Pi is not finite, so you cannot base anything on its specific value. My original problem consisted of completing one single revolution of plotting a circle. On the Graph of r = 0.5, when theta = Pi, there could be no point, and the circle could not be drawn. If you plotted at a very close value of pi, there would be an indent in the curve. This all mental, of course. I am not suggesting a perfect circle could exist physically.
That whole tangent on defining Pi to be a length was just a supplement to my original question. Trying to use your way of thinking, I attempted to show how nothing can truly be measured, but you can use integer values (or even finite decimal values) to represent the exact length of real physical things. For instance, a piece of wood conatining exactly all the same types of atoms, has 1 billion atoms from one end to the other. If there is a unit defined as one WoodMeter = 20,000,000 atoms, then the piece of Wood would be
exactly 50 WoodMeters long. But although this is an "exact" measurement in WoodMeters, what WoodMeters are based on (atoms) may not be able to be measured because there is nothing smaller to measure them with. Unlike my WoodMeter, Pi can never be a number to represent "how many" of something we have, or how many Pis we can make from X amount of units.
It is very hard (impossible) to approximate how small is infinitely small, so therefore, there will always be a size smaller than the smallest size. That is why a true "length" is impossible to have, since there is nothing to base it on. Using something to base your measurements can give an
exact value in those units.
Dave