• @myusernameisokay
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    71 year ago

    If the number of atoms is a multiple of 3, then you can split it perfectly.

    For example say there’s 6 atoms in a cake, and there’s 3 people that want cake. Each person gets 2 atoms which is one third of the cake.

    • @Ddhuud
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      11 year ago

      But if the cake has 7 atoms, better get cover on a nuclear bunker just to be safe.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      The main problem is simply that math is “perfect” and reality isn’t. Since math is an abstract description of causality while reality doesn’t/can’t really “do” infinity.

      But if you really wanted to, you could bake a cake in a lab with a predetermined number of atoms and then split that cake into 3 perfect slices. However, once you start counting multiples(like atoms in a cake) you would no longer get 1/3 or 0.3 because you are now dividing a number bigger than 1(the number of atoms) so you would’t get a fraction(0.3) You would get a whole number.