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by carterehsmith
3083 days ago
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What is the argument here? There are certain ways of assigning a number to the divergent (by partial sums) sum.
If they are well-defined, they all arrive at the same number. In this case, -1/12. There is nothing to argue here, that shit has been around for 200 years or more. And, there are some results in physics that actually measure close to the number -1/12, from something that looks like a sum of 1+2+3... and that's kind of telling us that the whole construction is not just some math sleight-of-hand, it actually has some meaning in the real world. Example: Casimir effect So my point is... that kind of suggests the smoothness, or continuity, or differentiability, or whatever we want to call it, of the underlying function. The opposite of discrete. Is what my point was. |
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