In case there's some question about whether i is a number:
- We know that x + 1 = 0 is a valid equation; however, if we only had regular "counting" numbers available, we couldn't solve it. We would have to invent a concept of negative numbers, which we are all comfortable with .
- Then we have the equation x
2 + 1 = 0. It also had no solution without inventing the concept of imaginary numbers.
--> Imaginary numbers are negative numbers are both pretty abstract. We can't see or touch either, but they seem to be numbers in a purely mathematical sense.
Ok, so the next question is, is 0 a number? It seems that 0 is just a placeholder. Doesn't "0" represent the lack of a number, not an actual number?
If 0 is a number, is it even or odd? What is the definition of even and odd that shows that 0 is even? Can it be shown that 0 also fits into the odd category?
Is the 0 in 2304 the same as the number 0? How are they related?
What is x in 2x = 6? Is it a number? It doesn't look like a number, but to anybody with more than a few years of math experience, it's immediately obvious that it's 3. If x can be considered a number, is it possible that our definition of numbers isn't as clear as we think?
What about x in 0x = 6? Is x still a number? Any number, real, rational, irrational, imaginary, etc. can be place in front of the x. But when the number 0 is, x no longer has a value. It seems like 0 isn't behaving as a number here.
Or, is there a case for considering 1/0 to be a number? Is the result infinite or undefined? Why? Is there a case for looking at it either way?
I think this is the most important question of all:
How are 0 and infinite related? Think about how to get the result of infinite in a
finite equation. The only way to get it is to use a 0. This means that 0 and infinite are related, and that infinite can be derived from 0. Because, as it was already discussed here, infinite isn't a number, does that show that 0 isn't either?
By the way, most of these questions were inspired by or ripped from a variety of sources. I post them here to provoke discussion, and maybe we'll all learn something.