On Jun 16, 7:42 am, NoEinstein <noeinst...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Bull shit, palsing! The direction of increasing value in, say, x = > y^2 is for x to go to infinity (it's a parabola) while y is still > quite finite. At ANY point in the math, x is increasing far faster > than y.
Sorry, never going to happen with real numbers. For your specified equation, you can give y any value you wish, any real number your small brain can imagine, and x can only approach infinity, but it will never get there, even though it increases far faster than y. No matter what real number you choose, no matter how large x becomes, as a real number you can still add '1' to it, so it clearly has not reached infinity.
To believe that, since x increases faster then y, that it must reach infinity first, just goes to show how little you understand the subject matter.
If you don't even partially understand the concept of infinity, you have no chance at all of understanding relativity.