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Belief Revision in non
Belief Revision in non

We put numbers from {1, 2, …, S} in 2 x n table like that
We put numbers from {1, 2, …, S} in 2 x n table like that

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Completeness or Incompleteness of Basic Mathematical Concepts
Completeness or Incompleteness of Basic Mathematical Concepts

Playing with Numbers
Playing with Numbers

... in the ones place of these numbers. Can you tell that? These numbers have only the digits 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 in the ones place. She divides these numbers by 2 and gets remainder 0. She also finds that the numbers 2467, 4829 are not divisible by 2. These numbers do not have 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8 in their ones p ...
CS1231 - Lecture 09
CS1231 - Lecture 09

... Which means (by definition of ‘;’), we need to show that there exists a bijection from 2Z to Z+ (or vice versa). Define f : Z2Z such that f(n) = 2n Now, f is a bijection from Z to 2Z. Which means that |2Z|;|Z| But we have also shown that |Z|;|Z+|. So |2Z|;|Z+| (Since ; is transitive) ...
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RATIONAL NUMBERS
RATIONAL NUMBERS

Fibonacci Identities as Binomial Sums
Fibonacci Identities as Binomial Sums

16 • Real numbers
16 • Real numbers

twin primes
twin primes

... TWIN PRIMES Bertrand Wong Eurotech, S’pore Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT This paper, which is a revision/expansion of the author’s earlier paper published in an international mathematics journal in 2003, approaches the twin primes problem from a few different perspectives. MSC: 11-XX (Number ...
Rational number - amans maths blogs
Rational number - amans maths blogs

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Computability on the Real Numbers

... νQare any notation of Q equivalent to νQand any standard notation of the binary rational numbers Q2 := {z/2n | z ∈ Z, n ∈ N}. Computability concepts introduced via robust definitions are not sensitive to “inessential” modifications. It can be expected that they occur in many applications. On the oth ...
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Rational and irrational numbers

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... These series are all very natural things to write down and we would like to understand them better. We calculate closed forms using various techniques. For example, we use relations between Hurwitz zeta functions, digamma functions, polygamma functions, Fourier analysis, discrete Fourier transforms, ...
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How do you compute the midpoint of an interval?

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Strong Logics of First and Second Order

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The Emergence of First

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Math 9th grade LEARNING OBJECT Exploring exponents and

Decimal Numbers 1000 100 ones 1 10 01 = . 1 100
Decimal Numbers 1000 100 ones 1 10 01 = . 1 100

... Decimal Numbers consist of a whole part, decimal point and fraction part For example 0.23, 12.345, and 0.675 are examples of decimal numbers Decimal numbers increase on left side and decrease on the right side of the decimal point Reading and Writing Decimal Numbers • The number of digits after the ...
5. factors and multiples
5. factors and multiples

Taming method in modal logic and mosaic method in temporal logic
Taming method in modal logic and mosaic method in temporal logic

< 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ... 158 >

Infinitesimal

In mathematics, infinitesimals are things so small that there is no way to measure them. The insight with exploiting infinitesimals was that entities could still retain certain specific properties, such as angle or slope, even though these entities were quantitatively small. The word infinitesimal comes from a 17th-century Modern Latin coinage infinitesimus, which originally referred to the ""infinite-th"" item in a sequence. It was originally introduced around 1670 by either Nicolaus Mercator or Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Infinitesimals are a basic ingredient in the procedures of infinitesimal calculus as developed by Leibniz, including the law of continuity and the transcendental law of homogeneity. In common speech, an infinitesimal object is an object which is smaller than any feasible measurement, but not zero in size; or, so small that it cannot be distinguished from zero by any available means. Hence, when used as an adjective, ""infinitesimal"" means ""extremely small"". In order to give it a meaning it usually has to be compared to another infinitesimal object in the same context (as in a derivative). Infinitely many infinitesimals are summed to produce an integral.Archimedes used what eventually came to be known as the method of indivisibles in his work The Method of Mechanical Theorems to find areas of regions and volumes of solids. In his formal published treatises, Archimedes solved the same problem using the method of exhaustion. The 15th century saw the work of Nicholas of Cusa, further developed in the 17th century by Johannes Kepler, in particular calculation of area of a circle by representing the latter as an infinite-sided polygon. Simon Stevin's work on decimal representation of all numbers in the 16th century prepared the ground for the real continuum. Bonaventura Cavalieri's method of indivisibles led to an extension of the results of the classical authors. The method of indivisibles related to geometrical figures as being composed of entities of codimension 1. John Wallis's infinitesimals differed from indivisibles in that he would decompose geometrical figures into infinitely thin building blocks of the same dimension as the figure, preparing the ground for general methods of the integral calculus. He exploited an infinitesimal denoted 1/∞ in area calculations.The use of infinitesimals by Leibniz relied upon heuristic principles, such as the law of continuity: what succeeds for the finite numbers succeeds also for the infinite numbers and vice versa; and the transcendental law of homogeneity that specifies procedures for replacing expressions involving inassignable quantities, by expressions involving only assignable ones. The 18th century saw routine use of infinitesimals by mathematicians such as Leonhard Euler and Joseph-Louis Lagrange. Augustin-Louis Cauchy exploited infinitesimals both in defining continuity in his Cours d'Analyse, and in defining an early form of a Dirac delta function. As Cantor and Dedekind were developing more abstract versions of Stevin's continuum, Paul du Bois-Reymond wrote a series of papers on infinitesimal-enriched continua based on growth rates of functions. Du Bois-Reymond's work inspired both Émile Borel and Thoralf Skolem. Borel explicitly linked du Bois-Reymond's work to Cauchy's work on rates of growth of infinitesimals. Skolem developed the first non-standard models of arithmetic in 1934. A mathematical implementation of both the law of continuity and infinitesimals was achieved by Abraham Robinson in 1961, who developed non-standard analysis based on earlier work by Edwin Hewitt in 1948 and Jerzy Łoś in 1955. The hyperreals implement an infinitesimal-enriched continuum and the transfer principle implements Leibniz's law of continuity. The standard part function implements Fermat's adequality.Vladimir Arnold wrote in 1990:Nowadays, when teaching analysis, it is not very popular to talk about infinitesimal quantities. Consequently present-day students are not fully in command of this language. Nevertheless, it is still necessary to have command of it.↑ ↑ ↑ ↑
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