This little guy craves the light of knowledge and wants to know why 0.999… = 1. He wants rigour, but he does accept proofs starting with any sort of premise.

Enlighten him.

  • dat_math [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Not quite. The wording “equivalence classes of … with respect to the relation R: aRb <==> lim( a_n - b_n) as n->inf” is key.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalence_class

    loosely, an equivalence relation is a relation between things in a set that behaves the way we want an equal sign to

    For an element in a set, a, the equivalence class of a is the set of all things in the larger set that are equivalent to a.

      • iie [they/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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        4 months ago

        “Having the same age” is an equivalence relation between people.

        • It is reflexive: Bob is always the same age as himself

        • It is symmetric: if Bob is the same age as Sally, then Sally is the same age as Bob

        • It is transitive: If Bob is the same age as Sally, and Sally is the same age as Fred, then Bob is the same age as Fred.

        using symbols:

        Bob ~ Bob
        
        Bob ~ Sally ⇒ Sally ~ Bob
        
        Bob ~ Sally and Sally ~ Fred ⇒ Bob ~ Fred 
        

        “⇒” means “the statement on the left implies the statement on the right.” When people in this thread write =>, <=, and <=> they mean ⇒, ⇐, and ⇔

        An “equivalence class” is the set of all items that obey the equivalence relation with each other. So, “being 25 years old” is an equivalence class containing every person who is 25 years old. Those people might be different in every other way, but they are equivalent in that specific regard.

        In their proof earlier, @Tomorrow_Farewell@hexbear.net defined two equivalence classes. Instead of “people who are 25 years old,” the classes were “infinite sequences that converge to 1” and “infinite sequences that converge to 0.999…” They showed that these are the same class.