Interesting question, but beyond my modest pay grade, I am afraid :) — SophistiCat
Er, your terminology is all over the place. A continuous function has left and right limits converging to each of its points. — SophistiCat
If you tilt the X-Y axes, it will become continuous. — SophistiCat
of course best to use a coordinate system at some angle to the staircase as otherwise the vertical lines are at the same x coordinate as the corners and it's not so clear what the jumping is. — boethius
since the staircase has discontinuous jumps in it — fdrake
A differentiable (or smooth) function has the first derivative at each point; the half-circle function is differentiable (again, modulo axis orientation). — SophistiCat
There are also piecewise- versions of all these (piecewise-continuous, etc.). — SophistiCat
your terminology is all over the place. — SophistiCat
Doesn't the "seeming straightness" of the staircase depend on the character of its visual appearance? Doesn't its visual appearance depend on facts about our visual systems and facts about the point of view we take relative to the staircase?However, as the size of each step diminishes the staircase seems to more and more approximate a straight line, which has length the square root of two — jgill
As for solving any of them. You'll need to do so relative an axiomatic system. If it's Euclidean geometry — boethius
For any continuous function like whose arclength for a <= x <= b is greater than b-a, its scaled down versions will still have the same ratio of arclength to b-a. So just about any continuous function at all that's not a constant. — Daz
You can obtain the result of the other "paradox" by drawing a symmetrical sawtooth graph on [0,1] that collapses as n increases, and whose length increases without bound. I leave this as an exercise for those interested. — jgill
Well, the formal answer is that the limit towards which the sequence is converging is not an element of the sequence — SophistiCat
No, if the arc length decreases any faster than in the examples that have been considered so far, it will converge to the length of the diagonal, as we intuitively expect. — SophistiCat
I am not sure why you keep talking about Euclidean geometry, which, as you admit, doesn't even have the notion of a limit. You may as well be talking about group theory. — SophistiCat
Still, it just looks... wrong — SophistiCat
the notion of vertical and horizontal Euclidean lengths is incommensurate with the notion of diagonal Euclidean lengths — sime
Because the OP does not specify an axiomatic system but describes the problem essentially in Euclidean geometry. — boethius
Note the outer corner points seem to generate a line as n increases, but is the eventual line entirely composed of a countable set of points? How can this be? — jgill
maybe we're interested in investigating the corners and want to deal with what happens when, trying to take the limit of shrinkifying the stair lengths, essentially every point becomes non-differentiable (that the object is "only corners", or at least all the rational points are defined as corners or some kind of scheme like this; may or may not be of interest to people here). — boethius
"Almost none" of the limit points on the diagonal (let's just call it that for brevity) is a corner point, for the simple reason that there is only a countable number of them. Also, keep in mind that the diagonal (which we interpret as the limit point of the sequence of curves) is not itself part of the sequence and does not have the same properties. Every member of the sequence is piecewise-differentiable, while the diagonal is, of course, everywhere differential. — SophistiCat
Oddities that math people explain in different ways. But intuitively it sure seems like a paradox. — jgill
Isn't the distance traveled on the stairs always 2? You not go in a straight line on the stairs. Only on a flat slope, if not slippery. The paradox is that the length of the stairs seems sqrt2 but is 2. — Raymond
How is an infinite line between 0 and 1 constructed? — Raymond
:sad:It's not a paradox — T Clark
My feet don't follow the discontinuous path of the stair. — T Clark
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