One particularly amusing thing: consider the numbers 132 and 123. The 2 actually has a very different meaning in those two numbers. The fact that _location matters_ is a deep idea.
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(I've glossed over 0 in various ways in this account. And over the fact that place-number system pre-dated the romans. If I was more conscientious I'd have talked more about these - they're incredibly deep ideas - but this thread is already long, so I'll keep glossing.)
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At this point we have a new numeral system. It's nice in a couple of ways when compared to roman numerals - it doesn't need new symbols to represent larger numbers, and it's extremely compact.
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Still, those things perhaps don't seem that important. Certainly not worth replacing an entire piece of intellectual infrastructure with!
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But where this number system really shines is in simplifying certain other things you might want to do. For instance, consider addition of the numbers wx and yz.
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We have wx + yz = (w*10+x) + (y*10+z) = (w+y)*10 + (x+z). Fiddle with this for a while - it's more work than I want to go through here - and you eventually recover the grade school algorithm for adding two-digit numbers. Do some more work, & you get the n-digit algorithm.
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There's a miracle going on here, one we don't notice b/c it's so familiar: I pointed out above that the numerals have very different meanings, depending on their location. But despite this, in the grade-school algorithm we use the _same rules_ for addition, regardless of place!
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E.g., in computing 27+38 at some point in the computation we'll use 2+3 = 5; in computing 72+83 at some point we'll also use 2+3=5. That's despite the fact that the 2 and the 3 in the first sum have a very different meaning than in the second sum!
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What's responsible for this astonishing fact? If you look back at the reasoning above, you see it's a consequence of associativity, commutativity, and distributivity. That's a pretty huge set of things! And it makes addition _really_ nice in this representation.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
This is a fascinating set of properties that I'm not sure the current system reflects well—at least not visually. Thinking of how I calculate percentages, I tend to calculate a whole number, then subtract the difference of the actual percent (eg, 17% = 20% - 3%).
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Yeah, it doesn't do a great job. Commutativity at least has symmetric signs (+ and *). But associativity and distributivity are not really evident at all...
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