6.5x10-5=(3.16X10-4)2/x-(3.16X10-4)
6.5x10-5=(3.16X10-4)/x
You have lost me here, there was a 2 in the upper equation, where is it now?
As I have already signalled earlier, your x is not amount of benzoic acid you should use.
I took =(3.16X10-4)2/x-(3.16X10-4) and divided it out, (which left me with 3.16x10-4/x so I multipled 6.5x10-5 by x and then divided by 3.16x10-4.
So are you saying the bottom half should not be x-3.16x10-4? my algebra skills are definetly not too hot, so that could be part of the problem (I haven't had algebra in 20 years, so bear with me, it's my weakest subject).
"And don't forget that what you are looking for is a sum of [C6H5COO-]+[C6H5COOH]." so is this where I am missing it? is the concentration just the left side added together and not to be factored out of the Ka=concentrations? I'm sorry I'm not getting it quicker, but chemistry is hard for me and I really need things pointed out sometimes even when the look obvious.