But that is not what is happening here. Using finite intuition would not lead to thinking 0.9... = 1. So the maths that demonstrates 0.9... = 1 is not using finite intuition.
However it is you who is trying to analyze it using finite intuition, which is the source of confusion I think.
Besides, 0.9... is a rational number, so I don't understand your last sentence in this instance. — PhilosophyRunner
In order for your technique to correspond with subtraction, you would need to describe a single algorithm that could handle all rational inputs. And then show a contradiction. — Real Gone Cat
The reason why you think 0.9 is rational is because you believe it equals 1, which is indeed a rational number. — keystone
You are unnecessarily confusing yourself. 0.9... IS a rational number. It is not that I think it is, rather it is.
Any number that infinitely repeats a finite sequence after the decimal point is a rational number. 0.9... repeats the finite sequence "9" infinitely, so is a rational number.
Irrational numbers, like Pi or the roots, don't have finite sequences repeating infinitely. — PhilosophyRunner
In both cases, the occupant of room 1 must leave room 1. In the case of 0.01[...], they then move into room 2 (of course bumping everybody up), and in the case of 0.1, they just go home. Either way, after the announcement, the hotel now has 1 empty room and an infinity of occupied rooms. — Real Gone Cat
[From] the axioms of set theory, we derive the theorems of calculus. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Ridiculous. — Deus
Calculus was developed well before set theory came into the scene. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also in the field of mathematics it’s nothing more than a minor development/distraction — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your criticism of my story was of an inconsequential intermediate step. And even now, you focusing on the program is secondary. — keystone
The reason why you think 0.9[...] is rational is because you believe it equals 1 — keystone
1) You provide any real number
2) I convert it to binary
3) Using the bijection, I find the correspond number within the range (0,1)
4) That number has a meaning in the hotel manager's system — keystone
I understand the claim that any number that infinitely repeats a finite sequence after the decimal point is a rational number. I know it's a basic and conventional idea. What I'm saying is that this claim rests on the notion of limits. — keystone
Without limits, I don't think you can even prove that 0.9[...]-0.9[...]=0? — keystone
But the whole point of Hilbert's hotel is that it can take in more guests. If it kicks guests out as it takes new guests in it's not actually able to hold more. — keystone
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