Imagine a hotel with an endless number of rooms, and every room is full. A new guest shows up, but instead of turning them away, the hotelier just asks everyone to move to the next room. Room 1 goes to Room 2, Room 2 to Room 3, and so on. The first guest now has a new room! This is the infinite hotel paradox, where even when every room is full, there's always space for more people, because infinity keeps going forever.
Examples
- A hotel with an endless number of rooms is always full, yet a new guest can still be accommodated by shifting everyone to the next room.
- Imagine moving all guests in Room 1 to Room 2, and so on, freeing up Room 1 for someone new.
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See also
- Why Do Infinity and Half-Infinity Both Equal the Same Number?
- Why Do Numbers Sometimes Seem to Disappear?
- How Does 0 x ♾️ , It's Not What You Think Work?
- How Does The Infinite Hotel Paradox - Jeff Dekofsky Work?
- What are infinitely many rows and columns?