Ok so I have had this theory for a very long time. It all started back in middle school when my friend Tyler had said that him and my friend Stephen came up with a theory that said, "-0 is infinity!" well for the longest tim I was telling them that there is no such thing as -0. My mind however has changed on the topic since then and I developed a theory that -0 is actually a black hole.
The explanation to my theory can be kind of confusing so just read this and if it makes sense please comment or email me. I believe that -0 is a black hole because "0" alone is that absence of a number or object. So if you were to say, "I have 0 pieces of candy" than that means the candy that was asked for is in absence or isn't and never was there. When you have a "-" sign (minus sign), that means that you are taking away something. If you were to do "10-5=5", that means you are taking away 5 from 10 or taking something, from something. But if you are to put a "-" in front of "0" than you are taking something, away from nothing (literally).
Black holes are nothing and are literally sucking galaxies, stars, gas, light, etc... into itself and once there is nothing left around it, it will keep taking something, from nothing (just like -0!!!). Here is an easy example: Jimmy wants to go to the local candy store, but he doesn't want candy, he wants a bike. So when Jimmy gets there, he is trying to take a bike from a candy store. Well the bike is non-existent (at least not in that store) but Jimmy still keeps trying to take it (just like a black hole!!!!)
Some of this theory of mine might make no sense at all to you, and thats because it's just so complicated that I'm just not sure how to word all of it. If you understand what I am saying and disagree, that is fine because I respect your opinion and I ask kindly that you respect mine and just forget you read this. However if you agree, feel free to drop a comment on this post or pop me off an e-mail at odoat@hotmail.com
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Theory of -0 (negative zero)
Labels: -0, blog, personal work, theory
Posted by Kyle at 7:21 PM
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