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On 9/15/2024 9:31 PM, Ross Finlayson wrote:Sorry. I meant the opposite of that.On 09/15/2024 03:07 PM, FromTheRafters wrote:on 9/15/2024, Ross Finlayson supposed :On 09/15/2024 11:03 AM, FromTheRafters wrote:After serious thinking Ross Finlayson wrote :>"What, no witty rejoinder?">
What you said has no relation to
the 'nextness' of elements in discrete sets.
What is 'next' to Pi+2 in the reals?
In the, "hyper-reals", it's its neighbors,
in the line-reals, put's previous and next,
in the field-reals, there's none,
and in the signal-reals, there's nothing.As n → ∞, (ι=⅟n), ⟨0,ι,2⋅ι,...,n⋅ι⟩ → ℚ∩[0,1]What is the successor function on the reals?>
Give me that, and maybe we can find the
'next' number greater than Pi.
Ah, good sir, then I'd like you to consider
a representation of real numbers as
with an integer part and a non-integer part,
the integer part of the integers, and
the non-integer part a value in [0,1],
where the values in [0,1], are as of
this model of (a finite segment of a) continuous domain,
these iota-values, line-reals,
as so established as according to the properties of
extent, density, completeness, and measure,
fulfilling implementing the Intermediate Value Theorem,
thus for
if not being the complete-ordered-field the field-reals,
yet being these iota-values a continuous domain [0,1]
these line-reals.
ℚ∩[0,1] is not complete.
ℚ∩[0,1] has one connected component,
being what you (RF) call "continuous".
ℚ∩[0,1] has no points next to each other.
That sounds like the Intermediate Value Theorem,I wonder what you think of something like Hilbert's
"postulate of continuity" for geometry, as with
regards to that in the course-of-passage of
the growth of a continuous quantity, it encounters,
in order, each of the points in the line.
where "encounters each" == 'no skips".
The Intermediate Value Theorem
is equivalent to
Dedekind completeness.
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