how does 1+1 = 3?
I've seen it around and I mean the obvious response is that its just wrong but people say stuff like there's just some special way to look at it or something. any ideas?
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how does 1+1 = 3? I've seen it around and I mean the obvious response is that its just wrong but people say stuff like there's just some special way to look at it or something. any ideas? |
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It's difficult to tell what is being asked here. This question is ambiguous, vague, incomplete, overly broad, or rhetorical and cannot be reasonably answered in its current form. For help clarifying this question so that it can be reopened, see the FAQ.
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It follows directly from the elementary theorem 2=1. Let $a=b$ be integers. $a = b$ Multiply both sides by $a$: $a^2 = ab$ Subtract $b^2$ from both sides: $a^2 -b^2 = ab - b^2$ Factor: $(a-b)(a+b) = b(a-b)$ Cancel $(a-b)$ on both sides: $a+b = b$ Use the fact $a=b$: $2b = b$ Divide both sides by $b$: $2 = 1$ Now that we have $2=1$, we get $3 = 1 + 1$ as a corollary. And an elementary proof of the Riemann Hypothesis. P.S. $a-b = 0$, so canceling is the same as division by $0$. |
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I have no idea which people are saying $1+1 = 3$ and why they are saying it. Certainly, without any additional explanation this sounds like a simply false statement: in standard arithmetic, $1+1 = 2$, which does not equal $3$! (It is not even the case that $1+ 1 = 3$ modulo n for any $n > 1$, and considering numbers modulo $1$ is, literally, trivial: I believe there was another recent question about that.) But there are real-world phenomena which are somewhat reasonably described as $1 +1 = 3$. For instance, suppose I am living on a desert island and I have fashioned a very crude scale out of coconuts, bamboo, crab exoskeleta, and so forth. My scale doesn't have decimals on it: it says that the weight of something is some whole number of pounds. Now it is entirely possible that I can have two rocks, each of which, according to the scale, weighs one pound, but when I put both rocks on the scale, it tells me that together they weigh three pounds. Of course this is an instance of rounding error: e.g. maybe the true weight of each rock is something like $1.35$ pounds -- which gets rounded to $1$ -- so the true weight of the two rocks is something like $2.7$ pounds -- which gets rounded to $3$. I have explained this in the context of a somewhat unlikely scenario, but rounding errors are something that one has to take very seriously in applied mathematics and the sciences. |
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It's actually much simpler than that. It's not a maths problem though. OK, brace yourselves, I'm gonna tell you about the little bees and the pretty flowers... More seriously, 1+1=3 is a colloquial expression for saying that when a man and a woman get together, they usually are soon 3 in the family. No math there. More like a riddle, a word game. |
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More generally, if somewhere in our reasoning we make a mistake (by dividing by zero, assuming that $a^2 = b^2 \implies a = b$, assuming that $\lnot P \implies \lnot Q$ follows from $P \implies Q$), we are able to prove anything. That is, $P \implies Q$ is always true if $P$ is false to begin with. Wikipedia calls this being "vacuously true", although I think the term is usually used when the hypothesis is not satisfied but the result is still true, as in the example given of all cell phones being turned off in a room simply because there are no cell phones. |
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