Details

Details
Thomas Nicely's life was going pretty well at Lynchburg College. He was a math professor in this small college in a small town. And he liked the life very much. He loved math and theoretical research. One day Thomas took his new computer with the blazing fast pentium chip in it and did a little division. One day he asked this new computer chip with the blinding speed to divide some numbers. He also asked four other computers without the pentium chip to do the division. The pentium chip answer was 1.212659624891157804, but it was the wrong answer. The correct answer was 1.21265962940866695. On the ninth digit from the decimal point the answer is wrong.

For most of us there is no problem. Most of us would never discover that mistake. But it is not correct. It is not true. And given the right circumstances it could prove disastrous. It is just a small mistake.


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Illustration from: David Clay, "Poinsettias and Collards," Ocean View Baptist Church, Norfolk, Virginia