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#1 |
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Oct 2005
Fribourg, Switzerlan
22·32·7 Posts |
Let n be the smallest positive integer not definable in under two words.
A friend of mine is unsure whether n can be found at all, and believes n is uncomputable in virtue of the equivocity of the English language (there are infinite ways of describing n, and one can therefore never be sure that any given description of a number is the shortest). The problem, he says, may seem more evident if you change "under two words" by "under three words", four, five, etc... (Obviously not going any higher than ten.) Any advice ? PS : This friend of mine studies philosophy... |
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#2 | |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
22×1,549 Posts |
Quote:
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#3 |
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Jun 2003
22×3×421 Posts |
Assuming a static vocabulary (i.e. the list of allowable "words" is constant) and unique interpretation (i.e. one specific sequence of word can define at most one number), then it is a simple matter of iterating thru all single-word and two-word sequences, and then finding out the smallest number not represented by them.
Isn't it?
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#4 | |
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Feb 2007
24×33 Posts |
Quote:
and, there are certainly languages in which all numbers are spelled as one single word. and and and.... Philosophy can be scientific, but often people in that field just produce nonsense. |
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#5 | ||
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Jun 2003
The Texas Hill Country
32·112 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
"Not more than two" is more interesting. And adding one more really opens up the possibilities. |
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#6 | |
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Feb 2007
24·33 Posts |
Quote:
and, for some word combinations it cannot be said, by principle, what they represent, they are ill-defined, like "the set of all sets", or "this phrase is a lie", or so. To be concrete, the "leastbiwordundefinable number" cannot exist. PS: if vou don't like "leastbiwordundefinable", call these numbers "infraperfect". So you are looking for the "smallest infraperfect". It cannot exist. Last fiddled with by m_f_h on 2008-04-08 at 20:55 Reason: added PS with historical word creation |
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#7 |
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"Ben"
Feb 2007
DB916 Posts |
This sounds similar to this thread:
http://www.mersenneforum.org/showthread.php?t=9546, in which one or more posts contain web links to a consistent methodology for speaking or writing any number. Everyone must agree on the rules before everyone can agree on an answer to this puzzle. That is what we did in the above thread... |
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#8 |
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6809 > 6502
"""""""""""""""""""
Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
100110001110102 Posts |
There are ways to construct a single word for a number. I think that this can be done through about 21.
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