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Is The Answer 42?
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An infinite number of points A are placed at random on an infinitely long line. A second infinity of points B are also placed at random on the line. How many B's coincide with one or more A's on average?
Answers
My gut feeling is that the answer should be zero but I am sure there's a better way to answer this than relying on points/line = countable/ uncountable -> 0
10:51 Sat 06th Jun 2020
I'm still not sure we are interpreting the question in the same way.
I took it we are placing an infinite number of points which can be labelled Ai for i=1 to infinity, i.e A1, A2, A3,....A999999, …
and then labelling another infinite number of points Bi for i=1 to infinity. i.e. B1, B2, B3, …..B999999, …
Now when we count the number of pairings are we only looking for A1=B1, A2=B2, A3=B3,....
or are we looking for A1= B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999....then A2= B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999.... then A3 = B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999.... etc etc
I took it we are placing an infinite number of points which can be labelled Ai for i=1 to infinity, i.e A1, A2, A3,....A999999, …
and then labelling another infinite number of points Bi for i=1 to infinity. i.e. B1, B2, B3, …..B999999, …
Now when we count the number of pairings are we only looking for A1=B1, A2=B2, A3=B3,....
or are we looking for A1= B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999....then A2= B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999.... then A3 = B1 or B2 or B3 ….B9999999.... etc etc
Sorry, I should have said aleph-one positions (i.e. An uncountable number of positions) and aleph-null points (i.e. A countable infinity of points). The aleph numbers represent differing degrees of infinity. The number of integers is aleph-null, and there are the same number of even numbers, the same number of perfect squares, primes, rational numbers, etc. But there are substantially more real numbers, so they are represented by aleph-one, which is the next higher infinity.
No, sadly. As Rev. Green's hinted there are different sizes of infinity. I'll try to clarify this later if you're interested, but in short it's the difference between trying to count "1, 2, 3, 4, ... " and "0.0000000000000000000000...". In the first place you never stop counting but at least you can kind of see that you can make progress, in the second you never even get away from 0.
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I can also see zero as the answer, although I am still not sure we are interpreting the question the same way. It's zero I think if Ai has to match Bi
If the first point A1 is placed at say 3.5 exactly there is an infinite number of other points that B1 could be placed at. Even getting close at 3.50000000000000001 say isn't good enough.
If the first point A1 is placed at say 3.5 exactly there is an infinite number of other points that B1 could be placed at. Even getting close at 3.50000000000000001 say isn't good enough.