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Mark44
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Yes, and this was the point I made before where you were talking about setting equations equal to zero. I was very careful to talk about equivalent equations.agentredlum said:I CANNOT take ax^2 + bx + c = 0 as a given, because it relies on the OTHER definition. Do you understand? You ask me to forget about it, but i cannot because it is the first step in the derivation and the most important.
So, where do i get my equation? I explained it in a previous post, I'll explain it again. I consider equivalent forms. Careful here, EQUIVALENT, not EQUAL.
What do you mean by "equivalent forms"? You couldn't possibly mean "equivalent equations", because none of the equations is equivalent to any of the others.agentredlum said:I consider 4 equivalent forms for my derivation.
It would be better to say "4 forms".
Identically equal to each other? That doesn't make any sense because equations aren't equal (identically or otherwise) to other equations. Two equations can be equivalent, but no two of the equations below are equivalent because of how you are defining b and c.agentredlum said:Each form, by itself, gives all possible 2nd degree equations applicable to completing the square. Each form is detached from the other 3 because no 2 are identically equal.
We get it already. You are defining a new standard form for quadratic equations, which necessarily causes a couple of changes in your revised quadratic formula. IMO, not that big a deal.agentredlum said:The 4 forms are
1) ax^2 + bx + c = 0
2) ax^2 + bx = c
3) ax^2 + c = bx
4) ax^2 = bx + c
I picked #4, completed the square and derived a different quadratic formula.
Then I made a NEW definition.
If ax^2 = bx + c
Then x = (b +-sqrt(b^2 + 4ac))/(2a)
This whole paragraph makes no sense to me. Invariance is already defined in mathematics, and you seem to be using your own definition. Please define this term for us as you mean it.agentredlum said:I NEVER said take b, c, and multiply them by -1. I said b is INVARIANT to -b and c is INVARIANT to -c. It's not the same thing! b is NOT equal to -b, c is NOT equal to -c (except for zero) but any real number can be represented by b or -b equaly well without loss of generality, same goes for c and -c. This is the way I used the idea of invariance. CAREFUL, 1 is NOT invariant to -1. The idea of invariance only works when considering generalities, NOT when you pick 2 different members of the set of real numbers.