iuliand: Yeah, I see, you're all smart... :P
Now, seriously, here we can see why this is a great community: everybody is trying to help event that the question is a bit childish.
I whole heartily agree that this is a great community!
- However -
The question isn't even a bit childish. Your presumption is rude, but please, follow my reasoning:
If a square root is not a replacement for a specific number, and irrational numbers cannot be resolved, there is a flaw in the accuracy of every mathematical system that uses the square root. If a square root must be used to represent an approximation then the concept of accuracy ceases to be absolute and becomes relative.
I am a 41 year old, second year college student taking algebra for the first time since I was a high school sophomore. What's more, I'm a philosophy major, so the choice to accept an approximation needs to be validated as a choice, rather than a cop out.
In order to have that make sense in my own mind, I had to ask the question, "what is the actual purpose of a square root." Most people only look as far as how one is used, I want to know why it even exists in the first place.
Does that make sense?
With that in mind I turned to the smartest group of people I knew that would actually have a great chance of knowing the answer without being snide or rude.
With the exception of you, this is exactly what I have encountered.
Telika: Maths, bah. Numbers are overrated anyway (I give them a 3 out of 10).
BEST!
MATH!
ANSWER!
EVER!