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From: Cwatters on 9 Jun 2010 04:05 "BURT" <macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:c8c904dd-ea08-45a7-93db-ef719186451f(a)s6g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > You cannot take away from a quantity more than its absolute value. You > canot subtract from zero. The minus sign for a negative number is only > real as a subtraction operator. > > Mitch Raemsch It appears you can on the stock market :-(
From: Ostap Bender on 9 Jun 2010 17:31 On Jun 8, 4:53 pm, Pollux <po....(a)gmail.com> wrote: > (6/8/10 4:48 PM), BURT wrote:> You cannot take away from a quantity more than its absolute value. You > > canot subtract from zero. The minus sign for a negative number is only > > real as a subtraction operator. > > > Mitch Raemsch > > Ah yeah, that's right. I heard something about people opposing the > existence of negative numbers. Wasn't that in the middle ages? These were very negative people, and they all died a negative number of years after the 16th centuries.
From: Ostap Bender on 9 Jun 2010 17:32 On Jun 8, 4:57 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote: > On Jun 8, 4:53 pm, Pollux <po....(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > (6/8/10 4:48 PM), BURT wrote:> You cannot take away from a quantity more than its absolute value. You > > > canot subtract from zero. The minus sign for a negative number is only > > > real as a subtraction operator. > > > > Mitch Raemsch > > > Ah yeah, that's right. I heard something about people opposing the > > existence of negative numbers. Wasn't that in the middle ages? > > > Pollux > > > --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: n...(a)netfront.net --- > > The existence of negative numbers is that they are absolutes values > with a minus operator. Their role is simply for subtraction. They are > not any negative quantity. > > There is no quantity below the absence of quantity or zero. > Please show otherwise. Brilliant idea. On a scale of 1 to 10, I give you -3
From: Cwatters on 10 Jun 2010 04:25 "BURT" <macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:c8c904dd-ea08-45a7-93db-ef719186451f(a)s6g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > You cannot take away from a quantity more than its absolute value. You > canot subtract from zero. The minus sign for a negative number is only > real as a subtraction operator. > > Mitch Raemsch As I brake for the junction in the road my acceleration is negative. What happens if I press the brake harder?
From: BURT on 10 Jun 2010 04:56 On Jun 10, 1:25 am, "Cwatters" <colin.wattersNOS...(a)TurnersOakNOSPAM.plus.com> wrote: > "BURT" <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message > > news:c8c904dd-ea08-45a7-93db-ef719186451f(a)s6g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > > > You cannot take away from a quantity more than its absolute value. You > > canot subtract from zero. The minus sign for a negative number is only > > real as a subtraction operator. > > > Mitch Raemsch > > As I brake for the junction in the road my acceleration is negative. What > happens if I press the brake harder? There is no negative acceleration. Slow downs are never accelerations. Einstein was wrong. Mitch Raemsch
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