I think I'll stop dividing by zero now. Everybody seems to prefer arguing against it, rather than help me figure out how to do it.
Well, as you didn't want to comment on my example, I do it myself:
sin(1/x) * 1/x for x -> 0 (let's say for x>0, i.e. coming from the right)
1/X goes to +inf. Sin(1/x), however,
oscillates infinitely often between 1 and -1 when going towards 0. That means that the product alternates in between larger and larger values,
both positive and negative, for x -> 0. So neither +inf nor -inf can be (by themselves) a limit.
The bottom line is that you cannot consistently define 1/0, because 'different ways of dividing by 0' (i.e. different ways of doing the limit) will give you different or even inconsistent results.
KE = m*(v^2)/2 = gamma*m0*(c^2)/2
.
Relativistic kinetic energy cannot be computed with that formula, even for particles with rest mass.
I think that DreamThorn is a follower of the idea that the body of mathematics, which we currently use, being derived from certain axioms, might in fact not be the best tool towards describing our physical world. After all, it seems logically sound, that one could perhaps choose different set of axioms, and derive an alternative mathematical system, which in turn could prove to be a better tool.
Well, yes, he's a follower of this idea, most of us just disagree with it. Well, in general yes, we probably need better maths or even different maths to describe the universe, but that's not because of division by zero problems. There might be a mathematical construct where you can define division by zero in a meaningful way, but
1) I don't see why one would need it to better the describe the universe ('the universe doesn't divide by zero').
2) It seems implausible, for reasons given, that you could get such a system by fiddling with the real numbers, as you, Il Palazzo, have pointed out. Which is another indication that one probably won't need the system anyway, because DreamThorn's intuition about
why one would need it certainly does come from playing around with real numbers.
Edit: typos, typos, typos.