• carmo55@lemmy.zip
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    12 days ago

    A practical application is for example in probability theory (or anywhere that deals with measures) such as this question:

    If we generate a random real number from 0 to 1, what is the probability that it is rational?

    Because we know that the continuum is so much larger in a sense than the set of rationals, we can answer this confidently and say the probability is zero, even though it is theoretically possible for us to get a rational number.

    Statistics deals with similar scenarios quite frequently, and without it we wouldn’t have the modern scientific method.