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Moebius <invalid@example.invalid> writes:Indeed! I sometimes try to steer WM away from 'math' symbols in sets like asking for a bijection of something like {elephant, rhinoceros, dune buggy} and {circle, square, megaphone}. Bijections work for any sets, not just numerical ones -- easier to demonstrate with numbers though because you can use set builder notation instead of just roster form for really large 'number cumbersome' sets.
>Am 11.07.2024 um 02:28 schrieb Chris M. Thomasson:>On 7/10/2024 5:24 PM, Moebius wrote:Even if a = b = c = 1?Am 11.07.2024 um 02:16 schrieb Chris M. Thomasson:I see {a, b, c} and {3, 4, 5} and think three elements.
{a, b, c} vs { 3, 4, 5 }HOW do you know that? Please define (for any sets A, B):
Both have the same number of elements, [...]
A and B /have the same number of elements/ iff ___________________ .
(i.e. fill out the blanks). :-)
Hint: That's what Ben Bacarisse is asking for.
Sure, it's "obvious" for us. But how would you define "have the same
number of elements" (in mathematical terms) such that it can be DEDUCED
(!) für certain sets A and B?
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Ok, I'm slighty vicious now... :-)
If a = b = c, {a, b, c} still has "the same number of elements" as {3,
4, 5 }? :-P
C'mon man! :-P
Please, that's a red herring, and you know it! No where did I say that
a, b and c stood for anything (i.e. that they might be variables in the
maths sense). I this sort of context they are just distinct symbols.
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