Nothing
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Nothing being better than nothing is like trying to divide nothing by nothing.
On the one hand, dividing nothing into any number of parts will still end up with nothing, so nothing divided by anything is still nothing.
On the other hand, when you divide any number by another number, that number will get larger as the number of parts you divide it into gets smaller. In other words, the smaller the pieces the more pieces you get. Ultimately, any number divided by nothing is infinite, since you can get an infinite number of pieces of no size out of any number.
So nothing divided by nothing is at one time both nothing and infinite.
Mathematics refers to 0/0 as indeterminate, since you can prove it to be any number, yet none of them.
On the one hand, dividing nothing into any number of parts will still end up with nothing, so nothing divided by anything is still nothing.
On the other hand, when you divide any number by another number, that number will get larger as the number of parts you divide it into gets smaller. In other words, the smaller the pieces the more pieces you get. Ultimately, any number divided by nothing is infinite, since you can get an infinite number of pieces of no size out of any number.
So nothing divided by nothing is at one time both nothing and infinite.
Mathematics refers to 0/0 as indeterminate, since you can prove it to be any number, yet none of them.
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an "O" thing
(original pronunciation in Shakespeare's title, "Much Ado About...")
(original pronunciation in Shakespeare's title, "Much Ado About...")
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There's no subliminal meaning; they all mean "nothing".
I remember when I used to live in Berkeley, CA., right by the UC Berkeley campus. We had a succession of students knocking on our door in the evening handing out political pamphlets and asking for donations. One day there was a knock on the door and a student was standing there.
"What do you know about Proposition 93 ?" he asked.
"Nothink", I replied.
"What part of Birmingham do you come from ?" he responded.
It somewhat took me back that from just one word he had identified my accent exactly.
I remember when I used to live in Berkeley, CA., right by the UC Berkeley campus. We had a succession of students knocking on our door in the evening handing out political pamphlets and asking for donations. One day there was a knock on the door and a student was standing there.
"What do you know about Proposition 93 ?" he asked.
"Nothink", I replied.
"What part of Birmingham do you come from ?" he responded.
It somewhat took me back that from just one word he had identified my accent exactly.
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If you read through the 110 pages you'll find that everything about the word "nothing" has been discussed in detail. Amongst the humour, I've gone to great lengths to explain the problem with the word. The main problem is that it's one of those nouns which in themselves don't stand, because they describe the lack of something.Rick Collins wrote:All of these words for the word NOTHING (colloq. and other wise), but no comprehensive definition of NOTHING....
What have the following words all got in common ?
COLD
DEATH
NOTHING
VACUUM
NOBODY
NO-ONE
DARKNESS
FREEDOM
INNOCENCE
They're all nouns which don't represent things, they represent the absence of something. In these cases they represent the absence of HEAT, LIFE, ANYTHING/SOMETHING, MATTER, ANYBODY/SOMEBODY, ANYONE/SOMEONE, LIGHT, CONSTRICTION and GUILT. There are many more nouns like this.
"Nothing" is the absence of anything, so when we say "nothing is better" we are not saying that something that we call "nothing" is better, we are saying that there is not a "something" which is better.
It's just a play on words in the English language. Try to translate "nothing is better" into a different language and you'll see what I mean.
(NB But don't try to translate into one of the other Germanic languages, such as Dutch/Flemish, German, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Afrikaans, because they're all decendants of Protogermanic and suffer the same plays on words as English.)
Most of the confusion in this topic, and probably the main cause of the continuous discussion, are the postings by members which contain insufficient punctuation, and so become ambiguous.
"I have nothing in the bag" could mean:-
"I have "nothing" in the bag," or
"I do not have anything in the bag."
This is a good example of what I'm talking about.Rick Collins wrote:...If NOTHING actually exists, let's see some...
It's ambiguous. It could mean,
"If "nothing" actually exists, let's see some..." or
"If there isn't anything that actually exists, let's see some."
In the first case, if the word "nothing" actually exists, (which it does), let's see some what ? You can't see "nothing", other than the word on a piece of paper, because it represents the lack of anything.
In the second case, if there isn't anything that actually exists, (which there is), let's see some... but see what. If there isn't anything that actually exists, then there's nothing to see.
In fact, if there isn't anything that actually exists, why am I typing this on a nonexistent keyboard into a nonexistent internet?
The mind boggles.
BOGGLE BOGGLE BOGGLE BOGGLE BOGGLE
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It depends on what the meaning if the word is, is.b0b wrote:Nothing is funny.
I checked with Monica on her connotation.
And, she says that in this context the verb "are" should be used, because of the implication that NOTHING would be assumed to be plural since everything in the universe is inclusive.