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On 12/13/2024 2:31 PM, WM wrote:Don't say what not is. Explain your vision of the problem:On 13.12.2024 20:00, Jim Burns wrote:On 12/13/2024 6:25 AM, WM wrote:The index of Eᑉ(2) is content of Eᑉ(1), etc.>Ignoring that Cantor's claim requires to>
empty the endsegments from all natural numbers
in order to use them as indices in mappings
Each finite.cardinal
⎛ is first in an end.segment.
⎝ is used as a index of an end.segment.
>
Each finite.cardinal
⎛ is absent from an end segment.
⎝ is emptied from the end.segments.
>
Require at will, sir.
If endegments were defined as
E(n) = {n+1, n+2, ...}:
>
E(0) = {1, 2, 3, ...}
E(1) = {2, 3, 4, ...}
E(2) = {3, 4, 5, ...}
...
E(ω-1} = { }.
Then this change from content to index
would even be more obvious.
The number doesn't change.
Which after.segment changes.
----
One problem which
Eᑉ(ω-1) = {}
has is that
'finite' is NOT defined the way in which
you (WM) think 'finite' should be,
which means
ω is NOT defined the way in which
you (WM) think ω should be.
Which meansThis contradicts the fact that nothing remains but every element can go only as a single.
⎛ if k is finite
⎝ then k+1 is finite
Therefore,This contradicts the fact that nothing remains but every element can go only as a single. Which if the two conditions (1) and (2) has to be sacrificed?
k ∈ ⟦0,ω⦆ ⇒ k+1 ∈ ⟦0,ω⦆
(1) is wrong?If all natnumbers can be used for mappings as indicesYes.
then every natnumber has to leave the sequence of endsegments.
Do you agree?
Therefore their intersection is empty.Yes.
Do you agree?
Emptying by one only impliesNo.
finite endsegment intersetcions.
Do you agree?
Then the intersection is never empty (or only for definable finite cardinals)?If not describe the process according to your opinion.Each end.segment ⟦k,ω⦆ of ⟦0,ω⦆ contains,
for each finite.cardinal j
a subset ⟦k,k+j⟧ holding more.than.j.many.
That contradicts |⟦k,ω⦆| being finite.Otherwise (1) /\ (2) is conztradicted.
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