A series converges to a value "s" if, by adding enough terms , you can get indefinitely
close to the value s. This is made rigorous : if I want to be within, say, 1/100 of the
value s, I must show that there is a term ,say "N", so that by adding N-or-more terms,
the value of the expression: (a_1+a_2+...+a_N )-s
of the sum will be within 1/100 of the value s. Take the series 1+1/2+1/4+...
Its limit is 2. After 1 term, you are within 1 unit of the limit. After adding two terms
you are within 1/2 of the limit. Now, convergence means that I can guarantee that , no
matter how close I want to get to 2, I just need to add enough terms, and my sum
will be within this --or (almost) any other--distance from 2. We do not demand that the
sum be exactly two, but that the sum be indefinitely close to it.