You're really missing the point. "Evolution is conservative therefore we all experience redness the same way" is also an opinion. Opinion dismissal is no justification for another opinion; all opinions should be held to the same standard, even if you happen to hold one of them.That's not an argument, it is an opinion. — A Raybould
Not... exactly. This is a guideline to applying relevant standards. You're arguing about differences and similarities of experiences between humans, under the presumption of a physicalist interpretation. So let's start here... is there reason for you to disagree that the key factor to look at here is the neural correlates to experiences?Furthermore, it is an opinion of an argument, not an opinion about how minds work. — A Raybould
But convincing you isn't supposed to be the goal. The goal is supposed to be applying a valid truth criteria. In this case, the criteria of truth should have something to do with neural correlates to experience... would you agree?You are entitled to your opinions, but don't expect anything like this, doubly removed as it is from any substantive issue, to be persuasive. — A Raybould
Binding in this case simply means creating some sort of stable state at some layer in the network; "interesting categories" can be self-discovered by features of the net analogous to how deep neural networks work. I'm not too interested in fleshing out this theory since I don't particularly subscribe to it... I'm more interested in gating the justifications to the things that they're supposed to be including (here is an ancient video including presentation of self-discovered categories using deep neural nets; but here is a link to a paper discussing the kinds of things I think should be included in any speculation).What does 'binding' mean? How are 'interesting' categories determined? — A Raybould
Your working hypothesis doesn't work.At this point, my working hypothesis is that you do not have any plausible arguments for that proposition. — A Raybould
Did you bother to try? At the highest level of abstraction this seems incredibly simple to me. We just postulate that there's a large number of potential experiences and that the brain, while learning to see colors, simply picks any of these to bind to the interesting categories. Synesthesia demonstrates that there are different kinds of experiences to pick from, and that they can at least be useful in some people as category tags even cross-sensually. My natural response to this is, if there are this many kinds of experiences, how many can there be? Incidentally, what made you make up your mind in the first place such that it would need to be changed?Your next sentence reinforced that view, and your final paragraph did not lead me to change my mind.
But the argument here is, at least IMO, trivially made. The arguments given for same-experience to me sound like classic textbook hasty generalization. It seems you're describing an approach that is particularly vulnerable to argument from personal incredulity, and is way too quick on the belief button for my tastes.but plausibility itself does not come out of nothing; it needs an argument in support. — A Raybould
So? We can talk about color experiences of humans too... we agree on color categories in those 95% of individuals I described earlier. But that says nothing about the experience being the same... only that the categories are.Biologists tell us about the color experiences of cats and dogs, why not humans? — Harry Hindu
...and so is its null hypothesis.it is a plausible hypothesis. — A Raybould
...color grapheme synesthetes (for example) still see color... they're just able to associate graphemes with color. Plausible explanations for color-grapheme synesthesia are here. The existence of conditions like synesthesia only seem to beef up the plausibility of the null hypothesis.For example, I am not a synaesthete, and so will clearly experience some things differently than those who are. — A Raybould
I could think of arguments, but that's irrelevant. The only argument necessary for my strong defense of a non-position is that the null hypothesis is plausible (see below).What arguments are there for the proposition that everyone experiences things differently? — A Raybould
You misunderstand. I don't have a theory of similarity, differentness, or even commensurability of experiences of color. What I have, instead, is a standard... an expectation of what kinds of things I need to see before I start doing silly things like believing a thing, that no random guy with some strong opinion and bad arguments is going to get me to lower. And as unfair as it may seem to be, I expect others to meet this standard before I can grant them my approval of their conjectures.Or do the three of us just have diffferent intuitions about how different they are?
Well, no... but we can work out what a metamer is and a theory of protanopia and deuteranopia. I'm pretty sure the things you're looking for are somewhere in the visual cortex.Then we can know about color experiences — Harry Hindu
Or differences in development.Sure, thanks to differences in genes. — Harry Hindu
You have this backwards. Both alleles and environmental differences exist in the human genome and human development; both in general, and in relation to known traits involving the visual system (e.g., there are alleles of genes that express the precise chemistry of your cone opsins; and vast differences in the distribution of cones between eyeballs); so it's dubious to just a priori speculate that there's no variance in the visual system elsewhere (in this particular case, in factors related to how color winds up getting experienced).What differences in genes would we point to that makes us experience different colors when looking at the same thing?
Correct.Then we aren't talking about knowing red, rather we are talking about knowing what it is like for Harry to see red — Harry Hindu
That argument isn't compelling. Being of the same species suggests tons of similarities, and we do have those... we generally tend to have opposable thumbs, walk upright, sweat, etc. But there are also a lot of differences that we have; different eye colors, body types, hair types, etc. Simply being of the same species is not enough to suggest we have the same color experiences; I would be more compelled if the argument specifically invoked studies of how the process of learning color works, and supported the thesis that there's a common representation (under the presumption that the nature of experience is built by the nature of the representation, and various other caveats)... but to simply conclude that the color experiences are the same because we're all human sounds to me more like guesswork.I should say that I don't believe that we each experience different colors when looking at the same thing. We are related - members of the same species that evolved from prior species with eyes and brains, therefore we should experience things similarly. — Harry Hindu
Agreed.you have billions of children all getting what is said and learn the words for the colors — Harry Hindu
Well, it's this:So, what exactly is the problem? — Harry Hindu
(A) Red only exists as an experience, and not outside of an experience. — Harry Hindu
A and B conflict. If we define h-red to be the experience you have when you look at a red crayon, then this category would be completely useless... only Harry Hindu could relate to it. If instead, we define c-red to be the "same color" as the crayon with "red" written on it (as we do in the kindergarten), then we could talk about said things, so long as we demonstrate the capability of recognizing what "same color" means, which we can establish with your kindergarten exercises for about 95% of individuals.(B) Your inverted spectrum would still be consistent, where your blue equals my red, — Harry Hindu
That's closer to being right, but note that this isn't an "experience" versus "wavelength" argument at this point, given we've introduced new entities with properties to consider (like "eyes").but that isn't saying anything about the object rather it is saying something about us as different individuals with different eyes and brains that interpret the wavelength that enters our eyes. — Harry Hindu
But that's conveying an "equivalence class" of objects and associating it with an "equivalence class" of sounds. This exercise requires me to recognize what "same sound" means, but let's grant that as a detail (and also, btw, we need to recognize objects as "not red"). I am then expected to have a capability of seeing that some of these objects have a "same-ness" to them and some a "different-ness"... if say I'm a protanope, I would have some difficulties here. If hypothetically I were a tetrachromat, it might be a bit confusing at first but I'd be able to pull it off.The same way your kindergarden teacher showed you - by showing an object or picture that is red. In showing a variety of different objects, none of which have anything in commom except their color, you should be able to realize what I'm referring to when I use the same sound when showing you ask the different objects. — Harry Hindu
I don't think it's even possible to define red in terms of an experience. How are you going to tell me which experience the color red is?Red only exists as an experience, and not outside of an experience. — Harry Hindu
I think you've misread something. You quoted me as objecting to the meaningfulness of saying that science's ambition is "of course" to extend the level of prediction and control over all of nature. Following that anthropomorphic attribution of motive to science, you start quoting SEP's entry on the knowledge argument.From the SEP entry on the topic:
...
Why do you think is the philosophical significance of the argument against physicalism? — Wayfarer
I think generalizing the motive behind objecting to physicalism has the same flaw as generalizing the motive of science; people have motives, ideas do not. I could speculate about what people's motives generally are, but I'm not sure I'm well informed enough in statistics of what's going on in peoples' minds to realistically apply any truth criteria to the matter.Why[sic-What?] do you think is the philosophical significance of the argument against physicalism? — Wayfarer
I'm not sure this actually describes a physical system well, or that saying that this is "the ambition of science" says anything meaningful. Maxwell's Demon vs the 2LT, for example, seems to suggest that even in the most deterministic of worlds predictability may not be allowed.The ambition of science is, of course, to extend this level of prediction and control over the whole of nature. — Wayfarer
...and I'm not sure you can say that either.But the problem is, subjects are not fully determined by physical laws - you can't predict what a subject will do or say.
Just as an additional point of clarification... once Mary sees red for the first time (fast forward through all of the "learning how to see" red to this point), Mary is experiencing red, and that is a brain state.because the brain-state of knowing what brain-state corresponds to actually seeing red and the brain-state of actually seeing red are themselves two different brain-states and being different they can't have the same effect. To clarify further, suppose x is the brain-state of seeing the color red and y the brain-state of knowing x. — TheMadFool
It's a bit tough to talk about since in my mind the specs are a bit fuzzy.You say that in that case the result isn't necessarily chaotic. That's what I'd like more information on, because it seems intuitively like it must be chaotic, — Pfhorrest
If information simply went back in time at all, it would be a "resulting" physical state that is also a "prior" physical state, but being a physical state in at least a Newtonian sort of sense, it should have some effect on the resulting physical state which could lead to a different result. You wouldn't need an intelligence to cause the conflict. Something akin to this is behind the Chronology Protection Conjecture.if you could send information back in time (backward causation) to show someone their future, their foreknowledge of that future would then change their behavior and so also change what their future ends up actually being. — Pfhorrest
Suppose instead of a person, it's just a computer program competing in a "tournament" of sorts. A program may be coded, say, to run Monte Carlo simulations of other programs to affect its odds of winning the tournament. In such a way we can abstract out the intelligence and the person. (Incidentally I've competed in such tourneys before... it's fun). But this isn't changing any program's behavior; it's simply coding what the behavior is. And the result isn't necessarily chaotic just because your program is playing by these rules. Does that make sense?Likewise, if that person merely predicts their own future in an ordinary way (or just hears such a prediction), those expectations about the future will change their behavior and so make their actual future vary from the predictions. — Pfhorrest
...or, we're implemented by the atoms.Either we are the atoms, or we are some magical observer that only experiences the information that the atoms produce — Kev
There seems to be some suspect "I am not part of the universe" kind of thing going on in this reasoning.That is that if causality is constant, and we truly are observers of a mind that is determined by external forces, we would not have self-awareness. — Kev
If scientific is the standard and this is the rationale, I would think you should be skeptical of both Napoleon Hill's and Dunning-and-Kruger's studies. So I'm particularly interested in the fact that you're only skeptical of the latter.There is no such thing as a "scientific" psychological study. — Gregory
Oh I'm not so interested in the actual Napoleon Hill, as I am in the epistemic standard being employed (though I would like to imagine Napoleon Hill playing a nice game of chess against DrDrunkenstein).See the WIki article. — Banno
Were they scientific, though? You know, as opposed to those unscientific Dunning-Kruger studies?Same as every psychological study that has ever been done: observation — Gregory
there are only three options when providing further proof in response to further questioning: — Münchhausen trilemma (wiki)
It's a fine point in the mechanics you describe. Suppose we're mulling over three options; A, B, and C. In terms of "effort" they may rank B, A, C; in terms of "fun" they may rank C, B, A; and so on. Under compatibilism there must be some sort of actual process resolving these desires into a selection. Whatever that process is, you can view it analogously to the desires being voters, and the options being what's voted on. The analogy dissolves when you consider that the math doesn't change just because these desires aren't literally voters. All I'm saying is that "strongest" desire doesn't necessarily fit the mechanics... it's simply some sort of messier resolution.I don't think that theorem has much, if anything, to do with compatibilism. — Gregory
Well if there are deterministic rules, then for all practical purposes our soul is physical and made of meat... but said meat would still cause things.Things seemed already planned for me, but I seem most certainly free at the same time. Is the pre-established harmony choices of my own soul that come to the surface for me to see? — Gregory
That seems to presume that your ego is limited to what you're conscious of. I'm not quite sure I buy that; it violates specific observations involving self reflection. To me, it appears that anything meaningful that I call "me" is more than what I'm aware of... it's just that the stuff I am aware of happens to be that part that I'm aware of. The "me" is bigger, consisting of all of the stuff I mean, all of the stuff I know, all of the stuff I know how to do, and so on, whether I'm currently thinking about such things or not (and furthermore, the factual knowledge about my "me" seems to be a constructed model of myself). Furthermore, I don't think I can be conscious of a thing before there's a thing to be conscious of, so unless things loop from consciousness to mulling and back (or something to that effect), they generally start unconsciously.I tend to be skeptical about the subconscious or unconscious or pre-conscious making chooses for my ego — Gregory
This presumes that there are hazy assertions. Under a charitable interpretation, you misread the assertions.The one and only assertion I made in my original post was: "there are quite a few... hazy assertions in the preceding deluge." — Key
I beg you to find any understanding of Laplace's demon that would remotely agree with you. Laplace's demon is a concept of causal determinism. — Key
Okay, so Laplace's demon is a concept of causal determinism. But under causal determinism, there is only one possible sequence of events. If there's only one possible sequence of events, there is only one reality. So what are these limitless realities you're talking about? I only count one of them.In my second post (replying to you) I stated that the probability of an actor existing in a universe of potentially limitless realities and being bound to a maximum of two conscious choices is less than a snowman's chance in hell. — Key
Because you quoted Gregory, and Gregory's model is that we always choose the "strongest" desire. This implies a well ordering of desires that specifies the choice, such that there's a well defined maximum. I've already critiqued this using Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, but it works just fine for two choices. But aside from there technically not being a clean concept of "strongest desire", the number really doesn't matter, so long as it's more than one.Here's a few questions you should consider answering: why does your actor only possess a greater and lesser choice? — Key
Okay.If you look rather briefly at the entirety of my post and the references I made to the original post... you may note the thick, goopy sarcasm. The question mark might also help you. — Key
"Free ... to choose the lesser one" admits to a potential interpretation that the lesser is part of the consideration and that the actor is the cause of the choice. The particular phrasing of this sentence supports this interpretation.But I think we are free none the less to choose the lesser one and although we never will choose it, we will always consider it¹. — Gregory
Laplace's demon would indicate that the greater happens. This is consistent with the fact that there was a consideration of the lesser and that the actor was the cause of the choice; that is, all three of the following can be true:If Laplace's demon indicates the possibility for a good number of realities, the likelihood that only two of those are ever available to be chosen from isn't too hot. — Key
Out of interest, I offer the view that this is a bit too "easy" of a theory, and there's reason to suspect it can't quite work this way (this is quite nit picky, but I'm actually particularly interested in the weeds). In particular, when we choose something, we choose options, not desires; the desires we have sort of rank the options, and somehow choices come out. If you view this like voting, then Arrow's Impossibility Theorem comes into play... this suggests that at least when more than 2 options are presented, then there's simply some sort of messy conflict resolution between the options, and AIT kind of proves that it has to be messy.we always follow our strongest desire, but we are free in our choices. — Gregory
Options being considered in a choice are considerations, not "realities". (I have no qualms how you map this to "free will" one way or the other, but having a single outcome does not entail a choice was not made... all it entails is that if a choice was made, that outcome was what was chosen).assuming there are only two possible choices is completely ignoring Laplace's demon? — Key
They're distinct... Laplace's demon has free omniscience... Maxwell's demon's knowledge has costs.Could they be the same? — Banno
Depends on the discussion... the conversation about epistemic limits reminded me a lot about Maxwell's demon.Of course; but which one: Maxwell's or Laplace's? — Banno
That's absurd... no competent physicist would even attempt such a thing. They would use a demon.The standard philosophical prejudice is that given an accurate enough account of the position of the box and a given ball, a competent physicist will be able to tell us which of the bins across the bottom the ball will land in. — Banno
Oh you silly confused soul, seeing liars behind your eyelids. I suppose you also see lies in the fact that 3*3=9, given we're multiplying two threes and getting an odd number? Maybe this whole math thing isn't going to work for you.The idea that one is a product of zero. — Metaphysician Undercover
Alright I'll play. What is the nature of this deception?You mean, I am here to learn, and not to be deceived, don't you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but it's quite ineffective... we already knew you weren't here to learn. Along the same lines, I never heard that paragraph after the one you quoted about the history of primes (gee, I wonder why, wink wink... o/c I know why and everyone with a browser can find out why in 30 seconds). Also along the same lines, that wiki page on mathematical objects that you could just as easily have looked up as the primes is still there.First class example of deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Good question. 1 is the product of zero primes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_productAnd what about 1? — Metaphysician Undercover
Where have you looked? Or am I your personal search engine now?I have yet to see a definition of "mathematical object" which allows for the application of the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
We have the terms rational and real, so, you're just whining.Sure, leaving the definition — Metaphysician Undercover
I beg your pardon:I do not understand numbers well enough to create such a theory. — Metaphysician Undercover
I note here that you're not just asking for a definition of number. You're asking for a definition of number that has these properties.I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me how the so-called "object", or "number" which is represent by "1" and is by definition not a multitude, and therefore not composed of parts, can be divided into nine parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm a metaphysician, and some mathematical axioms are derived from metaphysical concepts such as the concepts of unity and continuity, which are features of "being", a subject of metaphysics. So I'm not exactly a layman on these issues. — Metaphysician Undercover
MU has a metaphysical theory of numbers, he's a believer in them in the full b-word sense (it's part of his identity... almost literally), and modern math is kind of a heresy wrt it. That's my take. I personally envision his theories as being roughly of both the form and value of Eric the half a bee.Something tells me that it's partly solipsism, partly an expression of aggression against the imposition of an external control over his thinking. — dex
What are you talking about, "problem" and "required"? The fundamental theorem of arithmetic states, in the modern reading, that all positive integers can be represented as a unique product of primes (barring order). That's perfectly phraseable with prime including 1, it's just clumsy: "All positive integers can be represented as a unique products of primes, barring order, excluding from said product the number 1". Both phrases describe the same fact. One is just clumsier.It was only in relatively modern times that mathematicians wanted 1 to be a number, and this created the problem which required an exception to be added into the rule of primality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Pretty much.I provided a... — Metaphysician Undercover
Sort of, but not really. "Number" applies to a lot of things. But that's not a problem; it's actually a benefit. The definition of number should not merely not be nailed down; it should be open. But part of the point of categorizing these numbers is so that we can give particular kinds of numbers names.This is the point I've argued from the beginning of the thread. To know whether the op offers an acceptable representation of numbers, we need a working definition of "number", — Metaphysician Undercover
This is jargon... they refer to the same mathematical object.Clearly "2+2", and "4" do not refer to the same "object" by any conventional definition of "object". — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyone who uses the decimal system to count above 9 shouldn't take your pronouncement seriously.Any system of interpretation which ignores the role of "+" within an equation, to claim that "2+2" says the same thing as "4", cannot really be taken seriously. — Metaphysician Undercover
...Your so-called history of prime numbers is backward compared to what Wikipedia has to say: — Metaphysician Undercover
...while we're on the subject, what does the very next paragraph say?So, according to Wikipedia — Metaphysician Undercover
Welcome to the year 2020. So what's the problem?Then, in more modern times mathematicians wanted to treat 1 as a number, so they had to include it in the prime numbers and this created a problem. Now they've excluded 1 from the prime numbers, by definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
...so where does that leave you? Do you have the foggiest idea what a number is? Do you make universal, uncategorized statements about numbers?What is a problem is conceited people making the universal, uncategorized statements like "we already know what numbers are", when it's very evident that they haven't the foggiest idea of what a number is. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you're lost, MU. This is supposed to be a thread about 0.(9)=1.It is not logical to refer to a property of a special type of number (real number) to demonstrate what a number is in general. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well that's really easy MU. Here's the primary motivation, in your words:I apologize for not joining your little game, but I see no reason to restrict our discussion of "numbers" to real numbers. — Metaphysician Undercover
The way to avoid inconsistencies and contradictions that lead to misunderstandings and deceptions (aka, amphibolies/equivocations) where languages have homonyms is to restrict the conversation to applicable shades of meaning. When in a pool hall and someone talks about how to sink the 7 without sinking the 8, English should be regarded as a pool-technique, so it simply means to invoke a spin on the ball... countering a discussion invoking the use of English with debates about how some hypothetical guy from England might sink the 7 is a meaningless distraction. In this context, we're supposed to be talking about 0.(9)=1. 0.(9) is a repeated decimal. Repeated decimals are special cases of fractions, suggesting a treatment of at a minimal Q, though decimals just commonly invoke R. So to avoid misunderstandings and deceptions, to meaningfully talk about Q and R, we should be employing the context of one of these two things.I'm trying to learn the language, and I don't like inconsistency or contradictions within the language I use. Such things lead to misunderstanding and even deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
And you're immune to it?Denial is one of many possible responses. — Metaphysician Undercover
It was meant to be an analogy... primes are numbers, but not all numbers are prime, was the point. But apparently you're even more messed up than this:What kind of nonsense is this? — Metaphysician Undercover
Utterly wrong. There is a history to the concept of prime numbers... after some time in the development of number theory, it was quite apparent that it would be more useful to exclude one from the definition of primes in particular to avoid having to keep making exceptions for it, especially in the fundamental theory of arithmetic which is heralded as being an especially important theorem. That has nothing to do with considering one as a number though... that ship has long since sailed:They are called "prime numbers". And "one" fulfills all the conditions of "being called a prime", except that it is not a number. — Metaphysician Undercover
...but ultimately it's just a loss of religion. There's no actual deep reason to not consider 1 (and 0) a number, except a bunch of meaningless mumbo jumbo.1 (one, also called unit, and unity) is a number, and a numerical digit used to represent that number in numerals. It represents a single entity, the unit of counting or measurement. For example, a line segment of unit length is a line segment of length 1. — one
You still have no idea what you're talking about... consistent with everything I've been saying for 11 pages, this is a language barrier and you're still confused.This is very clearly not true, as I think everyone else on this thread has admitted, except you. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're referring to the fact that @Michael listed some categories of numbers here; namely, N (the whole numbers), Z (the integers), Q (the rationals), R (the reals), and C (complex numbers). Those are indeed categories, but there are more; beyond C, there are quaternions and octonions. In contrast to R, there are surreals and hyperreals. Take just Z into the complex plan and you get Gaussian Integers. This is not an exhaustive inventory. All of these things have their own kinds of numbers, and we can even make up new kinds of numbers on the fly.There is no clear definition of what a number is, and there are supposed to be different sorts, natural numbers, rational numbers, real numbers.
Vagueness is not transitive. An animal can be anything. My pet is an animal. But my pet cannot be anything; my pet is a cat. A number in general likewise could be just about anything. But 1/9 is a fraction, and 0.(1) is a repeated decimal. Generally discussions of such things are in R, though Q suffices.What the other participants in this thread have indicated is that "number" is just a vague term with no real defining features. — Metaphysician Undercover
That doesn't surprise me, but I gave you a link to it. So I guess a bit more spoon feeding you is in order:Sorry, but I have no idea what your little diagram is supposed to be showing. — Metaphysician Undercover
On the same page:In basic mathematics, a number line is a picture of a graduated straight line that serves as abstraction for real numbers, denoted by . Every point of a number line is assumed to correspond to a real number, and every real number to a point. — number line (wikipedia)
Compare to here.Two numbers can be added by "picking up" the length from 0 to one of the numbers, and putting it down again with the end that was 0 placed on top of the other number. — number line (wikipedia)
The diagram tells you how you're supposed to play the language game with real numbers. 0.(1) is a real number.It's obviously not providing a definition, or any sort of indication as to what a number is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Silly MU, there is no case. You have no jurisdiction, the defendant is a non-entity (language), there is no standing, and there is nothing actionable.So how is that diagram supposed to argue your case?
Sorry, but we haven't resolved that there's an actual problem here (not to me, or to anyone else here that I've seen).Sorry, but we haven't resolved the question — Metaphysician Undercover
If turtles are animals, why do they lay eggs? Since when does being called a prime have anything to do with being a number? The very fact that you even asked this question and actually think it's relevant shows that something is majorly wrong with your "problems".If you think it represents a number, then why is this number not a prime number? — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is that 1/9 is not a name for anything. — Metaphysician Undercover
the question of whether "1" is the representation of a number or not. — Metaphysician Undercover
We already know what numbers are and what expressions mean. The only problem here is you, and we don't even have to deal with that problem. But you've diverted 11 pages on this thread so far on your ego tripping delusions of having a problem. That's the problem.Your notion that a mathematical expression names a thing, is the problem you need to deal with. — Metaphysician Undercover
This idea allows people like fishfry to argue that "2+2" refers to the same object as "4". — Metaphysician Undercover
Lousy example. The number's representation is no more the number than you are a white M in a pink rectangle.Take a look at the divisibility of "1" in base two, and compare it with the divisibility of "1" in base ten, for a good example — Metaphysician Undercover
Call me crazy, but why isn't a base 9 and a base 10 representation of the same number a base 9 and base 10 representation of the same number?If 1 is divisible, its divisibility is different in base nine from what it is in base ten. — Metaphysician Undercover