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Le 01/08/2024 à 02:09, Richard Damon a écrit :No. There is ALWAYS an epsilon.On 7/31/24 10:27 AM, WM wrote:That is simply nonsense. Do you know what an accumalation point is?Le 31/07/2024 à 03:28, Richard Damon a écrit :In other words, outside the Natural Nubmer, all of which are definedOn 7/30/24 1:37 PM, WM wrote:In the midst, far beyond all definable numbers, far beyond ω/10^10.Le 30/07/2024 à 03:18, Richard Damon a écrit :And where is that in {1, 2, 3, ... w} ?On 7/29/24 9:11 AM, WM wrote:>ω/2But what number became ω when doubled?
and definable.
Every eps interval around 0 contains unit fractions which cannot be
separated from 0 by any eps. Therefore your claim is wrong.
How are they defined?They are natural numbers.They may be "dark" but they are not Natural Numbers.The input set was the Natural Numbers and w,ω/10^10 and ω/10 are dark natural numbers.
Natural numbers, by their definition, are reachable by a finite numberThat is the opinion of Peano and his disciples. It holds only for
of successor operations from 0.
potetial infinity, i.e., definable numbers.
A "gap" implies some sort of space that is not filled. There is no suchWhat is the reason for the gap before omega? How large is it? Are theseI assume completness.I guess you definition of "completeness" is incorrect.
If I take the set of all cats, and the set of all doges, can there not
be a gap between them?
questions a blasphemy?
If k did not have a successor, what would k+1 be?That does ny formula not say. It says for all n which have successors,Right, for ALL n in ℕ, there exist another number in ℕ that is n+1,No. My formula says ∀n ∈ ℕ.∀n ∈ ℕ: 1/n - 1/(n+1) > 0. Note the universal quantifier.Right, so we can say that ∀n ∈ ℕ: 1/n > 1/(n+1), so that for every
unit fraction 1/n, there exists another unit fraction smaller than
itself.
there is distance between 1/n and 1/(n+1).
It is the definition of definable numbers. Study the accumulation point.Maybe not for dark numbers, but it does for all Natural Numbers, asRemember, one property of Natural numbers that ∀n ∈ ℕ: n+1 exists.Not for all dark numbers.
that is part of their DEFINITION.
Define (separate by an eps from 0) all unit fractions. Fail.
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