It was doing whatever God wanted. It was not limited by our present laws. The speed of God's will is not fixed, but depends on many things. Some say that, after death, they saw a great light, but it was not a burning light, the sort that hurts the eyes.
So you don't have any data at all. Mkay.
And the meaning of infinity is beyond present description.
Wrong - I've already given you its meaning. It is the behaviour of 1/x as x approaches 0. It is the size of the set of all numbers.
The fish was B. The loaves were A. We are not told the details. But, after all was said and done, there were 12 baskets full that were uneaten, left over. Let us say that there were 100 loaves, and 15 fish in each basket. That means we fed 20,000 people with 5 loaves and I think it was 2 fishes, and had about 1200 loaves, and 180 fish left over!!
Well, we took about 21,200 a's from the 5 a's in the above example. And what was left was not )!!! It was 12 baskets full of leftovers. So, there is a higher math.
No. If you remove or eat some fish, and then it turns out that there are more, then those more must have been added. That's fine.
Dad, how much change do you give for a 2.95 item when given $5? "It depends?"
The fundamental that what exists in this temporary state is all there is or was, or will be.
That isn't a fundamental of mathematics.
Well, maybe if we bend and contort a number in the box, it seems like it equals any number. But, 2 does not really = 12. Well, show us the number for infinity that leaves 1 as 0.
Assume infinity is a number. Add one to infinity:
infinity + 1 = infinity.
Now, infinity is a number, by our assumption, so it must have an
additive inverse. That's a fundamental property of all real numbers. (If you think it isn't, you're wrong. It is. By definition.) So we add this, representing it by -infinity:
infinity + (-infinity) + 1 = infinity + (-infinity)
Now, the additive inverse
by definition is that number which, when added to the number of which it is an inverse, makes zero. So infinity + (-infinity) = 0:
0 + 1 = 0
1 = 0.
So, if you suppose that infinity is a real number, and if you accept the fundamental properties of real numbers, then 1 = 0. Of course, if you add
any other number, 'x' you can prove in exactly the same way that x = 0. You could even do that with infinity, proving infinity = 0!
That, dad, is the problem with treating infinity like a real number.
You did, when you said that my claim, "infinity is not a number because mathematicians have defined it to be something else" is an argument from popularity. Which is wrong, it's an argument from definition.
Why, am I talking to the person that thinks he does???
I know I do and I have demonstrated, not only that I do, but that you don't.
When a university decides to progress from baby math that only includes this temporal state, why, we might talk. Meanwhile, if I want answers, that is the last place I would look.
No, I'm suggesting you go tell them the answers, seeing as how you apparently know so much!
Just expect to actually give some proofs and and so on. Not that that should be hard for someone who likes higher maths!