>>43401257Naturally, it'll tell you there's no part of the world it can't find. Its dataset is complete. This brings up the old chestnut number theorists have been grappling with for centuries - are numbers real - do numbers have a real correlation to real-world things, such that there really exists 'ONE' apple, or does something else entirely exist, and I'm just using this mental concept of 'one' to handle it? What does it mean to have -1 apples? Or i apples?
See, coordinates are similarly just numbers expressed in terms of an arc from the center of the Earth. Naturally, Hogwarts MUST exist in conjunction with some combination of these numbers. Or must it? Could it be that if you nuked every possible combination of numerals denoting longitude and latitude, you still would not even come close to Hogwarts? Because 'unplottable, bitch?' And what would that mean for math in general?