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Does 0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 exist?

MougyWolf · 36-40, M
Yes, as defined, that is simply zero (with a lot of redundancy). In physics, it would represent the absolute absence of something, but as an integer, and even as a concept, it counts for something, even if nothing at all.
Ian123 · 61-69, M
Isn't that the same as a single zero?
MougyWolf · 36-40, M
@Ian123 Yes and no. It's still zero, but it is zero measured to a much greater accuracy or certainty
Ian123 · 61-69, M
@MougyWolf If its zero, how can you reduce it
Alabamianqueen · 31-35, F
@MougyWolf Can your birthday be used as a recurring decimal for the accuracy?
MatronClaire · 61-69, F
Yes, but a simple 0 would suffice.
DDonde · 31-35, M
What color is 0.0000?

 
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