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On 10/10/2024 8:54 PM, Ross Finlayson wrote:Halmos wrote a book "Infinite Dimensional Vector Spaces",On 10/10/2024 01:47 PM, Jim Burns wrote:>>ω is the first (our) transfinite ordinal.>
∀γ: γ ∈ ⟦0,ω⦆ ⇔
∀β ∈ ⦅0,γ⟧: ∃α ∈ ⟦0,β⦆: α+1=β
Halmos has for "infinite-dimensional vector spaces",
What I _suspect_ is that
'has' used as it is just above here
is an idiom I'm not familiar with --
possibly transported from some non.English language.
>
Would you be able to provide some context to
this way in which you use 'has', Ross?
>so not only is the Archimedean contrived>
either "potential" or "un-bounded",
so is the matter of the count of dimensions
and the schema or quantification or
comprehension of the dimensions,
where there's a space like R^N in effect, or R^w,
then for a usual sort of idea that
"the first transfinite ordinal"
is only kind of after all those, ...,
like a "spiral space-filling curve".
My current best.understanding of your posts of this genre
is that you are conducting brainstorming exercises,
in which the most 'points' are awarded for _creativity_
and not as many for merely connecting ideas in
a narrative of some kind.
>
So, I will no longer try to decipher
how what you post connects to what I post.
If my understanding is close to the mark,
you (RF) might even prefer that they do not connect
-- more creativity that way..
>
>
What I mean by 'first transfinite ordinal' ω is that,
of all ordinals which are not.finite,
ω is the first such ordinal.
>
What I mean by 'ordinal' is that
each set of ordinals holds a minimum or is empty.
>
What I mean by 'finite ordinal' γ is that
it is first (ie, γ=0) or
its predecessor.ordinal γ-1 exists and,
for each non.0 prior ordinal β<γ
its predecessor.ordinal β-1 exists.
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