We all know how terrible Marx's understanding of economics was, but how many people knew that he was a terrible mathematician, as well? Here, behold this genius trying to define 0/0:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255609552_Calculus_A_Marxist_approach
"In calculating the derivative of a function from first principles, Marx did not like the notion of a limit. When considering (f(x) − f(a))/(x − a) he wanted to put x = a, after suitable cancelling or some other algebraic simplification, and write the result as 0/0. He did not see 0/0 as a fraction; he saw it as one symbol."
For those who don't know, 0/0 is undefined because it literally can't have any consistent definition. So this is equivalent to starting your reasoning with a premise like x and not x, which would imply, insensibly, that everything is true.
As Wikipedia puts it, if b ≠ 0 then the equation a/b = c is equivalent to a = b × c. Assuming that a/0 is a number c, then it must be that a = 0 × c = 0. However, the single number c would then have to be determined by the equation 0 = 0 × c, but every number satisfies this equation, so we cannot assign a numerical value to 0/0.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_by_zero
Weird how they ... somehow forgot ... to mention that in his list of math publications, though:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_manuscripts_of_Karl_Marx?wprov=sfla1
So if any of you are unfortunate enough to know Marx bros, you can point out that he was a terrible mathematician as well as a terrible economist.
Marx was a slovenly, moronic drunkard who knocked up his maid and left her destitute. He never worked an honest day in his life. His "theories" were nothing more than an excuse for his worthless, degenerate life.