abiyo said:
Thanks adriank and owl pride for your reply. Let me add some questions along this line.
1. So I studied how the construction of real numbers and one thing that is really puzzling me is do irrational numbers mean anything? Or are there just abstract artifacts? so for example pi and e have really pretty properties. Are there irrational numbers like pi and e (and not really roots of numbers) that have special
properties in some way?
All numbers have some special property; pi and e are the most common irrational numbers, because of their relation to periodic and dynamic behavior, respectively.
2. I understand the formal definition of division but what does it mean as a concept? Addition is incremental
operation, multiplication is repeated addition and subtraction is along the same line as addition. Really what do we mean(conceptually) when we divide two irrational numbers?
What does it conceptually mean when you multiply two irrational numbers? Ie., you are not adding 2 to itself pi times, since you cannot count pi occurences of the number two, only a natural number of occurences.
If you backtrack back to division amongst natural numbers, you can see that division can be defined as the number of times a number can be subtracted from another; repeated subtraction to multiplication's repeated addition.
Like that repeated addition definition, this does not generalize easily to irrational numbers without considering some gnarly limiting arguments.
An easier way is to note that each element must of course divide itself once: call the divisor its multiplicative inverse. This generates the full richness of an algebra with division without needing any sort of strange mechanical definition of division; only multiplication of numbers including their multiplicative inverses. Defining division becomes redundant.
The original question is then answered easily: 2/pi is the number x = 2*pi
-1. One can either stop here and find a limiting procedure for identifying the decimal expansion of the multiplicative inverse of pi, or multiplying both sides by pi, we see that x is the number satisfying the equation pi*x = 2. This is another easily approximated number, once we know a decimal expansion of pi.
Let me add one more
3. So I also read in my book that the set of natural numbers has the same cardinality as rational numbers.
I know cardinality implies a one-to-one mapping from N to the given set but given that Q is catching up with N(in a literal sense), are they really equal in cardinality? For example for the closed interval [1,2]
we have two natural numbers 1 and 2. The rational numbers in between have a higher cardinality than 2.
But of course we say that the 1-1 map exists if we consider the whole interval of rational and natural numbers? But shouldn't the mapping in some way account in how Q is slowly catching up?
Thanks
Abiyo
I do not understand what you mean by "catching up". Can you use more rigorous language to define the concept?
Note that cardinality discards any structural information about the set in question; it is concerned only with the elements of sets, not their relationships to each other or any type of topology, ordering, algebraic structure or such that one may place on them. Those structures are studied with other tools. For example, you are concerned that the set of rational numbers that satisfy certain order relations for the natural numbers 1 and 2 is an infinite set, and thus you can associate an infinite set of rationals for each pair of natural numbers.
This is not a problem, for you have not identified which type of infinity it is that is between 1 and 2, just that it is indeed infinite. If it is a countable infinity (which it is), then it is easy to prove that a countable amount of countable infinities is a countable infinity.
Since both sets are infinite, our comparison must come from identifying single elements with single elements and noting whether anything appears to be amiss. Trying to relate infinite sets with finite sets first, not knowing whether those infinite sets can be associated or not, is a path to confusion.