Sujet : Re: Incompleteness of Cantor's enumeration of the rational numbers (extra-ordinary)
De : mikko.levanto (at) *nospam* iki.fi (Mikko)
Groupes : sci.logicDate : 03. Dec 2024, 11:03:52
Autres entêtes
Organisation : -
Message-ID : <viml28$6j3$1@dont-email.me>
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On 2024-12-02 14:47:15 +0000, WM said:
On 02.12.2024 09:41, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-12-01 10:55:15 +0000, WM said:
What does "contradicts a bijection" mean?
It shows that the mapping claimed to be a bijection is not a bijection.
If so, no bijection is contradicted.
The *claim* that a bijection is possible is disproved.
The possibility of a bijection between the sets ℕ = {1, 2, 3, ...} and D = {10n | n ∈ ℕ} is contradicted.
No, it is not. You merely deny it, disregarding obvious facts.
Obvious is that for every interval (0, n] the relative covering is 1/10, and that there are no further black hats beyond all natnumbers n.
Irrelevant to everything quoted above.
You are unable to understand?
Understand what? I understand mathematics but not psychopatology.
-- Mikko