Liste des Groupes | Revenir à s math |
Le 06/04/2024 à 15:40, Richard Damon a écrit :Cantor's proposal is between members of two distinct sets.On 4/6/24 9:26 AM, WM wrote:That mapping is Cantor's proposal. But for every other mapping, the O's would also remain. All O's! It is th lossless exchange which proves it.Le 05/04/2024 à 12:57, FromTheRafters a écrit :>WM explained on 4/4/2024 :>>Explain why first bijecting n and n/1 should destroy an existing bijection!>
You still seem to think that sets change. If you mean 'n' is an element of the naturals then of course N bijects with the naturals as embedded in Q.
Of course. But if someone doubts it, I could directly map the naturals n/1 to the fractions with the result that there is no bijection.
No, not "No Bijection", but that mapping isn't a bijection.
But HIS does work, when you do it right.It is Cantor's famaous mapping, more than a century believed to be a bijection.>>
No, that is disproved by the remaining Os.
Which only shows that this one mapping doesn't work.
>
Why?And, when you try it within one set, as opposed to between two sets,If it operates, it must operate within one set too.
Regards, WM
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.