| Subject: | Re: Is there a possibility to have more than one ZERO vector in a space!? |
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| From: | José Carlos Santos |
| Date: | Tue, 31 Oct 2006 07:33:57 +0000 |
| Newsgroups: | sci.math |
m7ossny wrote: Another zero named ZERO3 whare d(ZERO3)=d(ZERO1)=d(ZERO2)=0 Please don't top-post. If you want to know what's that and why you shouldn't do it, read http://www.caliburn.nl/topposting.html or www.html-faq.com/etiquette/?toppost">http://www.html-faq.com/etiquette/?toppost Now, concerning Daniel W. Johnson's question What do you get for ZERO1 + ZERO2 ? the answer (which is a consequence of your second axiom) is ZERO1. And (for the same reason) it is also ZERO2. Therefore, ZERO=1 = ZERO2. Best regards, Jose Carlos Santos |
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