The answer to my little question about how many cards are there at noon is zero, for the very simple reason that whatever card you name will have been taken out.
The answer to my little question about how many cards are there at noon is zero, for the very simple reason that whatever card you name will have been taken out.
The answer to my little question about how many cards are there at noon is zero, for the very simple reason that whatever card you name will have been taken out.
Ah, so you admit to the potential pointlessness of lifeThe answer to my little question about how many cards are there at noon is zero, for the very simple reason that whatever card you name will have been taken out.
Heck! I done all that calculations and formulas for absolutely Nothing!
The paradox is that a "larger" infinity makes a "smaller" infinity equal to nothing. Zero itself is not really a number since it misbehaves in certain circumstances. However, God has created this and He understands wtf it all meansThe answer to my little question about how many cards are there at noon is zero, for the very simple reason that whatever card you name will have been taken out.
But surely that answer assumes that infinity is a number, rather than an abstract mathematical concept.
I think the answer in computer parlance is NaN (not a number).
The point, you dimwit, is that if there's not enough room in the observable universe to write it down, what would happen if you tried writing out the next number after it?One less than grahams number plus two.
Sure do! So presumably there is room to write down one less than this number?Well if there's not enough room to write down the original number you would have the same problem with that, so there is no point. And you call me a dimwit.