magicofthemind wrote:I expect there are, but they probably call them something that we can't pronounce.
Primtal, if you must know

Moderators: nickj, Lady of Mystery, Mandrake, bananafish, support
magicofthemind wrote:I expect there are, but they probably call them something that we can't pronounce.
Ted wrote:JakeThePerformer wrote:But...
You might say that 13 is four times larger than three. For it is, and then some. At least I think it would be correct to say that.
You might think that it is correct but you'd be wrong, IMHO. It's the "and some" part that proves the error in your maths. 2+2=4, not "3 and some unspecified additional value". Indeed, the more I think about it and the more I rewrite my reply the weirder I think your idea on this is.
TheStoner wrote:Ted wrote:JakeThePerformer wrote:But...
You might say that 13 is four times larger than three. For it is, and then some. At least I think it would be correct to say that.
You might think that it is correct but you'd be wrong, IMHO. It's the "and some" part that proves the error in your maths. 2+2=4, not "3 and some unspecified additional value". Indeed, the more I think about it and the more I rewrite my reply the weirder I think your idea on this is.
What Jake says can make sense in some contexts. Think of someone saying "The population of Brazil is four times the population of Spain". This is common usage and understandable to all, it would be missing the point to complain that the maths aren't exact.
Tomo wrote:Mr_Grue wrote:But if we multiply all known primes and then add 1...
But 1 is a prime number.
As is 2.
Lawrence wrote:You can also just multiply any amount of various different primes together and add 1 to get a prime.
Tomo wrote:Mr_Grue wrote:Technically 1 isn't a prime
I wrote that before my 8th cup of coffee.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 50 guests