Posted by: Gary Ernest Davis on: November 1, 2010
Debates
To paraphrase at least one U.S. President, the answer depends on what we mean by “equal”.
Equality takes some explaining in a mathematical setting.
As an example that is familiar to almost everyone, the fractions and are commonly regarded as equal and we write .
Yet is not identical with . There are least two ways in which this is so. First, we do not see a in the fraction . The form of these two fractions is different. Secondly, 1 part of an object – such as a cupcake – that has been divided into 2 equal pieces is quite different from 500 pieces of a cupcake that has been divided into 1000 equal pieces.
So what do we mean when we say that and are equal?
We mean that .
More generally, two fractions are equal when . Here, we take it for granted that we know what we mean by equality of whole numbers.
Fractions can be written as – possibly infinite – decimal strings using the digits .
The basic idea of a decimal string is that multiplication by 10 moves the digits to the left: . The reason for this is that we are thinking – in the back of our minds – that should mean , whatever a possibly infinite sum might mean.
We avoid thinking about infinite sums by just focusing on the decimal strings themselves.
How could we write a fraction such as as a decimal string: ?
Using the basic property of decimal strings, described above, we would have . But so we would have . Now we are right back where we started, so we will have .
In other words, using the basic property of decimal strings that multiplication by 10 moves the digits to the left, we have the decimal representation . Here the “3”s go on forever, without end.
This is a cute trick, but what could it mean? We cannot resort to infinite sums if we do not know what real numbers are, so we need another interpretation to guide our intuition. This is not so much a matter of mathematical logic, which is well-covered by any number of ways of constructing the real numbers, as it is of an intuitive understanding of equality of real numbers, represented as decimal strings. Our aim is to increase, not decrease, understanding for students and teachers.
Let’s think about a decimal string as a sequence of instructions: each of the digits is instructing us to move a pointer to a certain place on a line. We will use the decimal representation to illustrate what we mean by a sequence of instructions for moving a pointer on a line.
Imagine a pointer pointing at 0 on the number line:
Here the decimal strings have been placed on the line at spots that divide the numbers between 0 and 1 into 10 equal-sized intervals. These decimal strings represent the numbers .
The first digit – namely 3 – in the decimal string for indicates that we should move the pointer somewhere between the spots:
To figure out where between 0.3 and 0.4 the pointer goes, we divide the space between 0.3 and 0.4 into 10 equal size intervals. We label the new endpoints of these intervals .
The second digit – namely 3, again – in the decimal string for indicates that we should move the pointer somewhere between the spots, as in the diagram.
Again, this does not pin down the pointer exactly. So we take the interval between 0.33 and 0.34 and divide it into 10 equal sized intervals. The new labels for the endpoints of these intervals will be .
We read the third digit- 3, again – in the decimal string for and move the pointer somewhere between the spots.
This process of moving the pointer will never end, because there is a never ending sequence of 3’s in the decimal string for . The pointer never stops: it never actually points at at any stage we move it.
In terms of the moving pointer, how can we interpret ?
One way to answer this question is to say that as we move the pointer according to the instructions encoded in the decimal string , the distance between the pointer and becomes progressively closer to 0.
If we had placed the pointer at the left hand end of an interval at each step, the distance between the pointer and would reduce by each time.
That it is one way to think about the “=” in .
This is what is known as a “cognitive root” in the learning and teaching of mathematics:
The same idea of “equals” applies to .
We imagine a pointer located at 0 and move it to 0.9. The distance between the pointer and 1 is .
We take the next digit in the decimal string – 9 – and move the pointer to 0.99. The distance between the pointer and 1 is now . Each time we move the pointer according to the instruction encoded in the next digit in the decimal string the distance between the pointer and 1 is reduced by .
That is the sense in which we mean “=” in .
It all depends, to paraphrase a former US President again, what we mean by “equals.”
For a related discussion, see James Tanton’s video “Point Nine Forever”:
James rightly points out, in different terminology, that if the decimal string is to represent a number at all, then, by our fundamental operation of multiplying the decimal string by 10 we have
Posted by: Gary Ernest Davis on: October 28, 2010
The @mathchat topic for Thursday October 28, sale
In this post I want to think about the vertical integration aspect of this question.
Below are some issues that I feel need to be addressed in a genuinely productive and transformative mathematics curriculum K-20.
Math is a critical part of the education of all people. We can write math worksheets, offer math homework help, design math games – even cool math games, find math tutors, and set challenging math problems. But until we come together as a K-20 math community to discuss our understandings of mathematics, to voice our concerns about teaching, we will not begin to tackle the fragmented and piecemeal nature of mathematics teaching and learning.