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On 12/14/24 10:46 AM, WM wrote:It starts in the complement of the intervals of measure 3 covering rational numbers. If the cursor is thrown by chance, the chance is 3/oo = 0 that it hits an interval.On 14.12.2024 12:06, joes wrote:Where did the cursor come from in the first place?Am Sat, 14 Dec 2024 09:42:37 +0100 schrieb WM:>On 14.12.2024 09:30, Mikko wrote:They are ALREADY there.On 2024-12-13 10:28:44 +0000, WM said:IF ALL intervals and their endpoints are existing as invariable pointsOn 13.12.2024 10:46, Mikko wrote:False. From a point that is not a part of an interval no interval is
>Between any two intervals there is space and that space containsNo. Starting from a point in the complement the cursor will hit a
other intervals.
first interval. This is true for all visible intervals.
the nearest one because another interval is nearer.
on the real line this cannot happen. In potential infinity however
between any two points new intervals come into being.
Therefore they cannot appear after the cursor has passed their positions. Every interval and every end of an interval would be hit by the cursor.
And why did it pass them when you tried to place t?It passes an interval when it moves.
This is your old problem of there not being a "next" in a dense set.In a geometry where all points exist, all points can be passed. But the set of intervals is not dense. It would be dense if all rationals were covered.
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