- #36
Canute
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Yes, I think it was. This leaves my question.shmoe said:I think I see the problem. Whenever I've said "goes to zero" it doesn't necessarily mean whatever I was talking about is ever actually equal to zero, rather it gets arbitrarily close as in the sense of a limit... But it will never reach zero. I think you understood this and it was just a terminology gap.
If the probability of N+/-1 being a twin prime falls (all the way) to zero as P increases then there are not infinitely many twin primes of the form N+/-1. If it does not then there are. Is this reasoning flawed? Or, if the probability does not fall (all the way) to zero then does it just mean there may be infinitely many?