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The Infinite Hotel Paradox - Jeff Dekofsky

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    In the 1920's,
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    the German mathematician David Hilbert
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    devised a famous thought experiment
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    to show us just how hard it is
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    to wrap our minds around the concept of infinity.
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    Imagine a hotel with an infinite number of rooms
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    and a very hardworking night manager.
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    One night, the Infinite Hotel is completely full,
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    totally booked up with an infinite number of guests.
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    A man walks into the hotel
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    and asks for a room.
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    Rather than turn him down,
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    the night manager decides to make room for him.
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    How?
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    Easy, he asks the guest in room number 1
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    to move to room 2,
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    the guest in room 2 to move to room 3,
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    and so on.
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    Every guest moves from room number "n"
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    to room number "n+1".
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    Since there are an infinite number of rooms,
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    there is a new room for each existing guest.
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    This leaves room 1 open for the new customer.
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    The process can be repeated
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    for any finite number of new guests.
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    If, say, a tour bus unloads
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    40 new people looking for rooms,
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    then every existing guest just moves
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    from room number "n"
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    to room number "n+40",
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    thus, opening up the first 40 rooms.
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    But now an infinitely large bus
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    with a countedly infinite number of passengers
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    pulls up to rent rooms.
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    Countedly infinite is the key.
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    Now, the infinite bus of infinite passengers
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    perplexes the night manager at first,
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    but he realizes there's a way
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    to place each new person.
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    He asks the guest in room 1
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    to move to room 2.
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    He then asks the guest in room 2
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    to move to room 4,
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    the guest in room 3
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    to move to room 6,
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    and so one.
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    Each current guest moves from room number "n"
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    to room number "2n",
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    filling up only the infinite even-numbered rooms.
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    By doing this, he has now emptied
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    all of the infinitely many odd-numbered rooms,
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    which are then taken by the people
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    filing off the infinite bus.
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    Everyone's happy and the hotel's business
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    is booming more than ever.
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    Well, actually, it is booming
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    exactly the same amount as ever,
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    banking an infinite number of dollars a night.
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    Word spreads about this incredible hotel.
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    People pour in from far and wide.
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    One night, the unthinkable happens.
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    The night manager looks outside
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    and sees an infinite line
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    of infinitely large buses,
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    each with a countedly infinite number of passengers.
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    What can he do?
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    If he cannot find rooms for them,
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    the hotel will lose out
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    on an infinite amount of money,
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    and he will surely lose his job.
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    Luckily, he remembers
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    that around the year 300 B.C.E.,
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    Euclid proved that there is an infinite quantity
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    of prime numbers.
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    So, to accomplish this seemingly impossible task
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    of finding infinite beds
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    for infinite buses
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    of infinite weary travelers,
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    the night manager assigns every current guest
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    to the first prime number, 2,
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    raised to the power of their current room number.
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    So, the current occupant of room number 7
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    goes to room number 2^7,
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    which is room 128.
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    The night manager then takes the people
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    on the first of the infinite buses
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    and assigns them to the room number
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    of the next prime, 3,
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    raised to the power of their seat number on the bus.
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    So, the person in seat number 7 on the first bus
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    goes to room number 3^7
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    or room number 2,187.
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    This continues for all of the first bus.
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    The passengers on the second bus
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    are assigned powers of the next prime, 5.
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    The following bus, powers of 7.
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    Each bus follows:
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    powers of 11,
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    powers of 13,
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    powers of 17, etc.
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    Since each of these numbers
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    only has 1 and the natural number powers
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    of their prime number base as factors,
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    there are no overlapping room numbers.
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    All the buses' passengers fan out into rooms
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    using unique room assignment schemes
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    based on unique prime numbers.
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    In this way, the night manager can accomodate
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    every passenger on every bus.
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    Although, there will be many rooms that go unfilled,
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    like room 6
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    since 6 is not a power of any prime number.
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    Luckily, his bosses weren't very good in math,
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    so his job is safe.
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    The night manager's strategies are only possible
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    because while the Infinite Hotel
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    is certainly a logistical nightmare,
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    it only deals with the lowest level of infinity,
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    mainly, the countable infinity
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    of the natural numbers,
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    1, 2, 3, 4, and so on.
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    Georg Cantor called this level of infinity aleph-zero.
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    We use natural numbers for the room numbers
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    as well as the seat numbers on the buses.
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    If we were dealing with higher orders of infinity,
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    such as that of the real numbers,
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    these structured strategies
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    would no longer be possible
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    as we have no way
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    to systematically include every number.
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    The Real Number Infinite Hotel has
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    negative number rooms in the basement,
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    fractional rooms,
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    so the guy in room 1/2 always suspects
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    he has less room than the guy in room 1.
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    Square root rooms, like room radical 2
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    and room pi,
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    where the guests expect free dessert.
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    What self-respecting night manager
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    would ever want to work there
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    even for an infinite salary?
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    But over at Hilbert's Infinite Hotel,
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    where there's never any vacancy
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    and always room for more,
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    the scenarios faced by the ever diligent
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    and maybe too hospitable night manager
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    serve to remind us
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    of just how hard it is
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    for our relatively finite minds
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    to grasp a concept as large as infinity.
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    Maybe you can help tackle these problems
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    after a good night's sleep.
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    But honestly, we might need you
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    to change rooms at 2 a.m.
Title:
The Infinite Hotel Paradox - Jeff Dekofsky
Speaker:
Jeff Dekofsky
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-infinite-hotel-paradox-jeff-dekofsky

The Infinite Hotel, a thought experiment created by German mathematician David Hilbert, is a hotel with an infinite number of rooms. Easy to comprehend, right? Wrong. What if it's completely booked but one person wants to check in? What about 40? Or an infinitely full bus of people? Jeff Dekofsky solves these heady lodging issues using Hilbert's paradox.

Lesson by Jeff Dekofsky, animation by The Moving Company Animation Studio.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
06:00
  • The English transcript was updated on 3/23/2015.

  • Please note a typo in 1:19 countedly infinite => countebly infinite

  • Amendment to the previous comment:
    in 1:19, 1:23, and 2:28 should be countably infinite instead of countedly infinite. :)

English subtitles

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