> For instance, if you personally owed $100 trillion, you wouldn't be much relieved by a court order that reduced your liability by 99%.
It is *never• true that differences don’t matter. Only true that in some respects the difference matters, others it does not.
You manufactured a reasonable situation for differences not mattering.
But if I had $1 trillion, 99% off $100 trillion would matter.
As I noted, from the perspective of anyone in those universes, a 1 grain universe, or a solid grain universe would each be a spotty context to make a living.
But in very different ways!
So in this case, the ratio between two incomprehensibly large numbers, happens to be highly comprehensible under the circumstances in which they were described. I.e. universes and grains.
One can imagine that one of unexplained constants of nature might be a result of differences between unimaginably large numbers. Which again shows, that there is no such things as numbers so large differences don’t matter. Only cases where they don’t matter, or do. As with all approximations.
It is *never• true that differences don’t matter. Only true that in some respects the difference matters, others it does not.
You manufactured a reasonable situation for differences not mattering.
But if I had $1 trillion, 99% off $100 trillion would matter.
As I noted, from the perspective of anyone in those universes, a 1 grain universe, or a solid grain universe would each be a spotty context to make a living.
But in very different ways!
So in this case, the ratio between two incomprehensibly large numbers, happens to be highly comprehensible under the circumstances in which they were described. I.e. universes and grains.
One can imagine that one of unexplained constants of nature might be a result of differences between unimaginably large numbers. Which again shows, that there is no such things as numbers so large differences don’t matter. Only cases where they don’t matter, or do. As with all approximations.