Let's "prove" that every complex number
z is real.
If z=0 it's obvious. For all other complex numbers z=r*e^(θi), where r is a real number, and i=√-1.
Now, z= r*e^(θi)= r*(e^(2πi))^(θ/2π). Now as we know that e^(2πi)=1 we can write z =r*(1)^(θ/2π) → z=r.
What's wrong with this?
The general problem here is that z^(a*b) does not, without proper
restriction, equal (z^a)^b. (You can read "The Powers That Be,"
especially Tristan's example and my reply to it, to see what the story
is here, but that would be cheating!)
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Posted by Richard
on 2006-08-24 15:54:55 |