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On 16.10.2024 17:34, Jim Burns wrote:On 10/16/2024 4:50 AM, WM wrote:On 16.10.2024 10:27, WM wrote:
Proofs don't need 'maybe's.>>There is a general rule>
not open to further discussion:
When doubling natural numbers
we obtain natural numbers which
have not been doubled.
CORRECTION:
When doubling natural numbers we obtain
even numbers which have not been doubled.
The set S of ordinals which
are finite and for which
their double is not finite
doesn't hold first.S = 𝔊
>
⎛ Proof:
⎝ not( countable.to 2⋅(𝔊-1) ∧ not.countable.to 2⋅𝔊 )
>
The set S of ordinals which
are finite and for which
their double is not finite
is empty.
Maybe.
Then not all natural numbers have been doubled.No natural number is
There is no first natural number from which we obtainWhen doubling natural numbers (finite ordinals)>
we obtain natural numbers.
Maybe.
>When doubling all natural numbers>
we obtain only natural numbers.
That is impossible.
𝕆ᶠⁱⁿ is what we mean by ℕ>>In potential infinity
we obtain more even natural numbers
than have been doubled.
In actual infinity
we double ℕ and obtain
neither ℕ or a subset of ℕ.
There is a general rule not open to further discussion:
The natural numbers ℕ equal the finite ordinals 𝕆ᶠⁱⁿ
That is only possible in potential infinity.
But there the result is worthless.Unlike, for example, non.well.ordered ordinals,
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