On Tue, 2 Feb 2021 18:18:14 +0100, Roland Puntaier wrote:
>I don't know how the division came up.
Just to _off-topic_ provide an example, that in mathematics 0 is _not_ a
number like every other. However, even the first example, which isn't
that off-topic ;), does state that the natural numbers no
On 2/1/21 12:50 PM, Roland Puntaier via aur-general wrote:
> On Mon 21Jan25 13:32, alad via aur-general wrote:
>> In this thread, 0 (as a neutral element for addition, or zero element
>> for multiplication) is conflated with the empty set (which has
>> *cardinality* zero).
>>
>> As such I would kin
On Mon 21Jan25 13:32, alad via aur-general wrote:
On 25/01/2021 13:09, Ralf Mardorf via aur-general wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 12:03:12 +0100, Roland Puntaier wrote:
On 1/23/21 1:31 PM, Roland Puntaier via aur-general wrote:
mathematics allows 0.
0 is a number like every other.
Yesno
https:
On 25/01/2021 13:09, Ralf Mardorf via aur-general wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 12:03:12 +0100, Roland Puntaier wrote:
On 1/23/21 1:31 PM, Roland Puntaier via aur-general wrote:
mathematics allows 0.
0 is a number like every other.
Yesno
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_number
https://en.w
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 12:03:12 +0100, Roland Puntaier wrote:
>>On 1/23/21 1:31 PM, Roland Puntaier via aur-general wrote:
>>>mathematics allows 0.
>0 is a number like every other.
Yesno
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_number
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_(mathematics)#Division_by