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WM <wolfgang.mueckenheim@tha.de> wrote:Of course. But do you know what inclusion-monotony means? E(n+1) is a proper subset of E(n): {n+2, n+3, n+4, ...} c {n+1, n+2, n+3, n+4, ...}. Here the intersection cannot be empty unless there is an empty endsegment.On 07.01.2025 12:36, Alan Mackenzie wrote:If there were such
things as "potential" and "actual" infinity in maths,Your comments about my quotes show that you have lost all contact with
mathematics.then they would make a difference to some mathematical result.Of course. Here is a simple example, accessible to every student who is
not yet stultified by matheology.For the inclusion-monotonic sequence of endsegments of natural numbersThat is false. The intersection of even just two infinite sets can be
E(k) = {k+1, k+2, k+3, ...} the intersection of all terms is empty. But
if every number k has infinitely many successors, as ZF claims, then the
intersection is not empty.
empty.
As for the intersection of all endsegments of natural numbers, this isOf course. ∩{E(k) : k ∈ ℕ} = { }.
obviously empty.
But the theorems contradict the general law of mathematics.Therefore set theory, claiming both, is false.Set theory doesn't "claim" both. Set theory doesn't "claim" at all. It
has axioms and theorems derived from those axioms. If one accepts the
axioms, and nearly all mathematicians do, then one is logically forced to
accept the theorems, too.
See above.Inclusion monotonic sequences can only have an empty intersection ifFalse. Where do you get such an idea from?
they have an empty term.
Such sequences have an emptyIt is trivially true that only one element can vanish with each endsegment.
intersection if there is no element which is a member of each set in the
sequence. This is trivially true for the sequence of endsegments of the
natural numbers.
Jim "proved" that when exchanging two elements O and X, one of them can disappear. His "proofs" violate logic which says that lossless exchange will never suffer losses.Therefore the empty intersection of all requires the existence ofThat isn't mathematics. Jim proved some while ago that there are no dark
finite terms which must be dark.
numbers, in as far as he could get a definition of them out of you.
That's a simple fact. The sequence of natural numbersFurther there are not infinitely many infinite endsegments possibleThat's meaningless gobbledegook.
because the indices of an actually infinite set of endsegements without
gaps must be all natural numbers.
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