Changing someone's mind is very difficult, that's why I like puzzles most people get wrong: to try to open their mind. Challenging the claim that 2+2
is unequivocally 4
is one of my favorites to get people to reconsider what they think is true with 100% certainty.
2+2 = not what you think
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(2+2=4 (mod 4)) and (2+2=0 (mod 4)) is the same statement. If you omit the (mod 4) part, you're merely communicating badly. Again.
That is not what I asked.
I took the liberty of clarifying my position instead of answering the badly posed question. Naturally modular arithmetics is not the same as integer arithmetics.
"2+2=4" is true in both, only in one 2+2=0 is also true.
It's a yes-or-no question:
Do you believe that
(2+2=4)
and(2+2=0 (mod 4))
are "the same statement"?It's a badly posed question. You have been weaponizing ambiguity the whole time, I'm not accepting your framework without adding context.
If you want a question answered, state it clearly.
No, it's not. You are refusing to answer because the answer destroys your belief.
Are you denying that mathematical expressions exist?
It's a badly posed question because it's not fully specified, namely, you're not stating where
(2+2=4)
lives.Normally this wouldn't be a problem, because we can assume it's the default if not otherwise noted, but a) we'e explicitly discussing multiple number systems here and b) you have already proven you can't be trusted not to omit relevant information.
Your question is ambiguously stated. Normally it wouldn't be, but have earned a reputation of communicating badly. Define whether
(2+2=4)
in your question is integer arithmetics or(mod 4)
(or something else) and I'll answer your question.Really? Wasn't your entire argument relying on the fact that if the arithmetic wasn't specifically specified, then certain arithmetic was always assumed?
Which was my entire point.
So you are accepting it: normally
2+2
is not0
, but I didn't ask if normally that was the case, I asked if it was always the case.For the record, when I ask ChatGPT if it's always necessarily the case, it answers "no". It says that's not the case in other arithmetics. Weird that it interprets math like me, not like you.
It's not any modular arithmetic, it's standard arithmetic (the one you claimed should always be assumed).
It has been specified beforehand:
If in response you talk about standard arithmetic without clearly denoting it, that's just you communicating badly again, which is why I made you add a clarification.
You can get ChatGPT to tell you all sorts of bullshit, including self-contradictions. It's not an authority for anything.
That makes it a derail, since we were talking about modular arithmetics. But just for the record, the answer is no then.
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