Abstract This paper extends the Unitary Reference Principle (URP), first proposed in Brogley (2026a), to the specific domain of division. It identifies three hidden assumptions in conventional division, proposes a structural reformulation under which division is a declaration of partition rather than a reduction operation, and develops the Shared Reference Division Principle for cases where quantities exist in incommensurable dimensional domains. The paper demonstrates that the infinite repeating decimal is a depletion-renewal cycle — base-10 arithmetic repeatedly attempting and failing to express an exact fraction — and that the fraction is the exact answer while the decimal is the approximation. Division by zero is shown to be not undefined but unconstructable: zero has no declared reference, so there is nothing to divide into. This second edition incorporates cross-series consistency updates applied uniformly across all published URP papers: all subscript notation standardised (R(bridge), R(mass), R(volume), R(distance), R(time)); all citations updated to Brogley (2026a) reflecting the numbered series; the series citation line updated to show all four published DOIs; and a note on surplus (n > R) added before Section 3.5, pointing to the formal treatment in Brogley (2026a) Sections 1.5a–1.5e. No structural changes were made to the framework, proofs, or demonstrations. Contents: Chapter 1: The Problem With Division | Chapter 2: A History of Division — Four Thousand Years of Almost | Chapter 3: The URP Applied to Division (including Step 0, the Shared Reference Division Principle, and the Infinite Decimal as Depletion-Renewal Cycle) | Chapter 4: Demonstrations | Chapter 5: The Egyptian Fraction Connection | Chapter 6: Division Problems of Debate | Chapter 7: Implications and Conclusion Part of the URP Series: Paper 1 (Foundation): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19697119 Paper 2 (this paper — Division): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19733441 Paper 3 (Riemann Hypothesis): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19735713 Paper 4 (Geometry): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19847459 Version notes: v1 — April 2026: First edition v2 — April 28, 2026: Second edition — notation standardised, series citations added, surplus note added (Section 3.4), reference 1 updated to Third Edition Keywords division, Unitary Reference Principle, declared denominator, equal partition assumption, incomplete answer problem, Shared Reference Division Principle, depletion-renewal cycle, infinite decimal, division by zero, unconstructable, incommensurable references, bridge reference, Egyptian fractions, Erdős-Straus conjecture, surplus
Joshua Brogley (Fri,) studied this question.