Title: Zeno
1Zenos Paradox
- By Deborah Lowe
- and
- Vickie Bledsoe
2Zeno of Elea
- Zeno was a famous mathematician who was known for
posing puzzling paradoxes that seemed impossible
to solve. One of his most famous was his paradox
of Achilles and the Tortoise.
3- Zenos Paradox involves a race between the mighty
warrior Achilles and a tortoise. Achilles can
run 10 times as fast as the tortoise and
therefore gives the tortoise a ten meter head
start.
4If the tortoise has a ten meter head start can
Achilles ever catch him?
- By the time Achilles reaches the ten meter mark,
the tortoise will be at 11 meters. By the time
Achilles reaches 11 meters, the tortoise will be
at 11.1 meters and so on.
5Each moment Achilles catches up the distance
between them, the tortoise will be adding a new
distance. The tortoise claims Achilles will
never catch up.
- But will he?
- In other words, why ever move if we wont ever
get anywhere?
6To rephrase that Suppose I want to cover a
specified distance. First, I must cover half the
distance. Then I must cover half of half the
remaining distance. Then I must cover half of
half of half the remaining distance and so on
forever.
- In other words,
- 11/21/41/8...
7At first this may seem impossible but adding up
an infinite number of positive distances can add
up to a finite sum.
- All of these distances add up to ONE!
8An infinite sum such as this is an infinite
series. When such a sum adds up to a finite
number, it is calledsummable.
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9The solution is easy!
- Say it takes 2 seconds to walk 1/2 meter. It
would only take 1 second to walk 1/4 meter, 1/2
second to walk 1/8 meter and so on.
10It takes Achilles an infinite number of time
intervals for Achilles to catch the tortoise, but
the sum of these time intervals is a finite
amount of time.
11And poor old Achilles would have won his race!
12The End