Summing divergences and the real projective line

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The discussion centers on the concept of the real projective line (RPL), which posits that positive and negative infinity are connected and indistinguishable. Participants explore methods for summing divergent series, particularly using algebraic techniques, leading to counterintuitive results such as j(2) equating to -1. This raises questions about the validity of traditional ordering and arithmetic when dealing with infinite sums, suggesting that conventional notions of greater than and less than may not apply. The conversation emphasizes the need for caution in interpreting results from manipulating divergent series, as they can challenge established mathematical principles. Ultimately, the RPL serves as a reminder that infinite operations can yield complex and often perplexing outcomes.
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The real projective line states that there is not difference between positive and negative infinity (maybe except the path needed to be taken to "reach" either one of them) and they are actually connected.

There are a lot of ways to get a definite sum from a divergent series; one of which is the algebraic way (my personal favorite).

note:j(x)=x^0+x^1+x^2+x^3+...
Using the algebraic method I could derive the sum of j(2) as shown below:
j(2)=1+2+4+8+16+...
j(2)=1+2j(2)
j(2)= -1= 1+2+4+8+16+...

Does this mean that j(2) diverges so much that it went pass infinity from the positive side and landed on a definite negative point?
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If the statement above is true, then the idea of < and > falls apart.

Example:j(2)+j(1/2)-1=0 ( the extra -1 here is to account for the (1/2)^0 )
A sum of all positive numbers that equals 0.

A notion of < and > that would work in this scenario is by measuring how far it "moved" in the RPL.
j(2)+j(1/2)-1 "moved" and circled back to 0, but 0 never "moved".
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
j(4)=1+4+16+64+256+...
j(2)=1+2+4+8+16+32+64+128+256...=(1+2)+(4+8)+(16+32)+(64+128)+...
j(2)=3+12+48+192+...=3(1+4+16+64+...)
j(2)=3j(4)

S2:={1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,...}
S4:={1,4,16,64,256,...}
S2\S4={2,8,32,128,...} which is S4 multiplied by 2 element-wise
S2-S4=2(S4) (treat it like a sum)
S2=3(S4)

Does this also mean that in j(x), the smaller x (x>=1), the bigger* it is.
Bigger* meaning it "moved" more.
 
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japplepie said:
The real projective line states that there is not difference between positive and negative infinity (maybe except the path needed to be taken to "reach" either one of them) and they are actually connected.

The real projective line is the one point compactification of the real line. It is a topological space, not a sentient being with the ability to communicate. It does not state anything.

In this space, there is no "positive" infinity or "negative" infinity. There are not two points to differentiate. There is one new point. Saying that this point is different from itself in some way is ridiculous.

There are a lot of ways to get a definite sum from a divergent series; one of which is the algebraic way (my personal favorite).

note:j(x)=x^0+x^1+x^2+x^3+...
Using the algebraic method I could derive the sum of j(2) as shown below:
j(2)=1+2+4+8+16+...
j(2)=1+2j(2)
j(2)= -1= 1+2+4+8+16+...

Does this mean that j(2) diverges so much that it went pass infinity from the positive side and landed on a definite negative point?

This method assumes a lot of things about infinite sums; namely that this one in particular is a number and that all of the algebraic properties of finite addition and multiplication can be extended to infinite addition, whatever the hell that is. Since you haven't stipulated what infinite addition is nor why we should accept the aforementioned assumptions, there is no way to tell what your result "means".

If the statement above is true, then the idea of < and > falls apart.

Why? There are two very obvious linear orderings of the real projective line which extend the usual ordering on the reals.

Maybe you mean that this new ordering doesn't "play with" addition on the real projective line the same way the old ordering did on the real line. But regardless of where you put ∞ in this ordering, under the usual assignment of a+∞=∞ the theorems involving order and addition are still true.

So this is really about how your infinite addition interacts with the ordering. Again, until you tell us what infinite addition is, we can't confirm any observation regarding how the order is broken.

Example:j(2)+j(1/2)-1=0 ( the extra -1 here is to account for the (1/2)^0 )
A sum of all positive numbers that equals 0.

A notion of < and > that would work in this scenario is by measuring how far it "moved" in the RPL.
j(2)+j(1/2)-1 "moved" and circled back to 0, but 0 never "moved".
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
j(4)=1+4+16+64+256+...
j(2)=1+2+4+8+16+32+64+128+256...=(1+2)+(4+8)+(16+32)+(64+128)+...
j(2)=3+12+48+192+...=3(1+4+16+64+...)
j(2)=3j(4)

S2:={1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,...}
S4:={1,4,16,64,256,...}
S2\S4={2,8,32,128,...} which is S4 multiplied by 2 element-wise
S2-S4=2(S4) (treat it like a sum)
S2=3(S4)

Does this also mean that in j(x), the smaller x (x>=1), the bigger* it is.
Bigger* meaning it "moved" more.
 
gopher_p said:
The real projective line is the one point compactification of the real line. It is a topological space, not a sentient being with the ability to communicate. It does not state anything.
It means that the idea behind it states ...





This method assumes a lot of things about infinite sums; namely that this one in particular is a number and that all of the algebraic properties of finite addition and multiplication can be extended to infinite addition, whatever the hell that is. Since you haven't stipulated what infinite addition is nor why we should accept the aforementioned assumptions, there is no way to tell what your result "means".


And yes infinite operations are still very shady.
 
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