• @[email protected]
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    2216 days ago

    I’ve always hated this supposed paradox, because how is it possible for a hotel with infinite rooms to be full? Even with infinite guests, there will always be room for more. Because, you know, there are infinite rooms.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 days ago

      It’s mostly just a way of communicating the bizarre nature of infinite series and other problems related to infinity. Just fun thought experiments.

    • @[email protected]
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      1416 days ago

      It’s not always discussed as such, but Hilbert’s Hotel is a mathematically well defined topic and can be proved rigorously. An infinite set of rooms can be the set x1, x2,…xinf, and people can be y1, y2…yinf. You can pair every entry in these two sets. x1&y1, x2&y2,…xinf&yinf. You can’t number a room without having a person in the room, and you can’t find a person who doesn’t have a room.

    • @[email protected]
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      716 days ago

      If you have n rooms and n guests there are no empty rooms. Let n go to infinity and there should still be no empty rooms.

      The trick of the Hilbert hotel is that if you add a guest to a hotel with countably infinite guests the number of guests does not change.

    • @[email protected]
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      216 days ago

      The hotel should really just fill its even numbers rooms first, then if another person turned up after you already have an infinity of guests, you just house this start of a new Infinity in room 1 etc

      • @[email protected]
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        116 days ago

        What if they filled in multiples of 3? They get vacant space for infinitr people twice. Well just fill people as multiple of infinity, so that infinite times infinite people can fill it in