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On 12/4/2024 10:22 AM, FromTheRafters wrote:Yes, which more than just hints at a bijection. A bijection doesn't care about the symbols, only some idea of 'same size' or 'just as many'. An intersection requires knowing what symbols are in each set in order to 'find' matches. His infinite intersection of all endsegment sets is doomed to failure in the first iteration.Ross Finlayson laid this down on his screen :>On 12/04/2024 02:33 AM, FromTheRafters wrote:I like to look at it as {0,1,2,...} has a larger 'scope' of natural numbers than {1,2,3,...} while retaining the same set size.WM formulated the question :>On 03.12.2024 21:34, Jim Burns wrote:>On 12/3/2024 8:02 AM, WM wrote:>>E(1)∩E(2)∩...∩E(n) = E(n).>
Sequences which are identical in every term
have identical limits.
An empty intersection does not require
an empty end.segment.
A set of non-empty endsegments has a non-empty intersection. The
reason is inclusion-monotony.
Conclusion not supported by facts.
Is it "pair-wise" inclusion, or "super-task" inclusion?
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Which inclusion is of this conclusion?
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They differ, ....
{ 1 - 1, 2 - 1, 3 - 1, ... } = { 0, 1, 2, ... }
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{ 0 + 1, 1 + 1, 2 + 1, ... } = { 1, 2, 3, ... }
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A direct mapping between them?
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