Angra Mainyu
Veteran Member
The first sentence is false, and it should be obvious that it is false. It may appear to you that that is so, because you believe that I'm saying something very different from what I'm saying. But that is not on me.steve bank said:You appear to be arguing theory without knowing algebra and exponents.-1^3 = -1`*-1*-1 = -1.
The second sentence has the problem of lacking parentheses, but it is obviously true that (-1)^3=(-1)*(-1)*(-1)=-1 (well, it is obvious to me anyway).
That is correct.steve bank said:cube root (-27_^1/3 is -3. square root (-3)^1/2 is not defined.
Of course I reject nothing of the sort.steve bank said:This is fundamental to imaginary numbers. You can invoke theory as you please as long as you do not insist on rejecting the established well used rules of algebra, exponents, and complex numbers.
I already have, and this seems pointless because you are failing to follow, but here goes again: There is no function f from a domain D into the complex numbers with the following properties:steve bank said:Clarify, exactly what is it you are trying to prove or assert?
1. D contains the real line.
2. For all nonnegative real x, f(x)=sqrt(x).
3. For all x,y in D, f(xy)=f(x)f
4. For all x in D, (f(x))^2=x.
This is the sort of function that would extend the usual sqrt function, defined for nonnegative reals, and keeping some nice properties used in SLD's proof.
By the way, SLD's proof is actually a proof by contradiction that there is no such function. It's just that SLD (just for fun, because he understands it) reached the opposite conclusion, i.e., that 1=-1. I took this thread also to be for fun (hence, my first reply), but you made it contentious for some reason.
