Nil: Difference between revisions
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A quantity is said to be '''nil''', or '''negligible''', if it is small enough that it can be ignored. Nil is closely related to the standard mathematics concept of an '''infinitesimal''', but it is not the same. Nil is also closely related to the concept of [[Integers|zero]]. | A quantity is said to be '''nil''', or '''negligible''', if it is small enough that it can be ignored. Nil is closely related to the standard mathematics concept of an '''infinitesimal''', but it is not the same. Nil is also closely related to the concept of [[Integers|zero]], but is not the same. | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
The name nil for this concept was, I think, coined by Harry Binswanger in his lecture [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwHAObb7tt8 Saving Math from Plato]. [TODO rephrase or put this elsewhere in the document] | The name nil for this concept was, I think, coined by Harry Binswanger in his lecture [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwHAObb7tt8 Saving Math from Plato]. [TODO rephrase or put this elsewhere in the document] |
Revision as of 02:08, 21 January 2024
A quantity is said to be nil, or negligible, if it is small enough that it can be ignored. Nil is closely related to the standard mathematics concept of an infinitesimal, but it is not the same. Nil is also closely related to the concept of zero, but is not the same.
References
The name nil for this concept was, I think, coined by Harry Binswanger in his lecture Saving Math from Plato. [TODO rephrase or put this elsewhere in the document]