Math, asked by paradox727, 1 year ago

how to proof 1+1 is not 2 its not false quantum mechanics question any can answer it​

Answers

Answered by wwwHarshSable
2

Answer:-

In a theoretical sense, then yes, 1+1=2 every time. This is very useful to us for calculations, because you need all your units and functions to be constant… otherwise, where would we be?

But, 1+1=2 was originally ‘invented’ for us to count stuff, like sheep. In real life, the ‘units’ we are counting (sheep) are never, ever identical. Even two apples are never identical. So the theory of identical units, only exists in theory, which is absolutely essential to physics… but isn't real in a real life sense. In real life, when it comes to the value of those sheep, other factors come into play additional to the unit of “sheep”.

Eg:

“I want to buy four of your good laying chickens for one of my sheep”.

“don't be ridiculous… my chickens lay the most eggs in this village! You can have three chickens, and I get to pick the sheep”.

“okay, three chickens… but you can't have Woolley Betty. She's my best milker and wooller! You can pick from Alice, Connie or Rosie.”

(Etc etc until a deal is struck).

This is a silly example of bartering, as I am useless at it, but is just supposed to illustrate that one unit in real life does not generally have equal value to another unit, when we assign units as tangible objects. Woolly Betty is the same unit as the other sheep, because she is a sheep, but she's off limits because her value is greatest to the seller. All sheep are not created equal.

And that is why bartering always had to take place. A sign saying:

“4 chickens for sale = 1 sheep”

does not make good business sense because it can too easily be abused. You could give a geriatric sheep, a ram (no milk), even a dead sheep… so criteria outside of the ‘Units’ alone must be accounted for.

Money is different. Money has universal value. Even if you gave somebody a crumpled, torn old £10 note, it has the same value as a crisp new £10 note. The note is only a symbol of value, and proof that you own that value to spend. Money works entirely differently to counting objects, because money only represents value, and the units stay the same, as the units are based in theory… whilst the cold, hard cash only represents the monetary value.

So for this question, it depends on whether you are talking theory in a perfect world that only exists in an abstract sense for our convenience, or whether it applies to counting real objects in real life (why counting was invented) where one unit virtually never equals another. And that is when 1+1 is not 2… it’s when you leave an abstract world and enter the real, tangible one.

Hope it helps you..

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