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WM <wolfgang.mueckenheim@tha.de> wrote:That is not said because it is true for all sets of natural numbers.On 17.10.2024 23:22, Alan Mackenzie wrote:WM <wolfgang.mueckenheim@tha.de> wrote:If you can't understand or don't believe, then there is no common basis
for discussion.It's not a matter of belief. It's a matter of correct and rigorous
mathematics.When doubling natural numbers we obtain even numbers which have not been
doubled.This is a sentence that every mathematician can understand.It is not - it is ill formed and ambiguous. It doesn't say which
natural numbers are being doubled.
It is unmathematical in that itWrong again. Even all natural numbers can be multiplied by 2.
seems to posit a doubling being done one element at a time
rather thanTherefore the standard notion is wrong, if the natural numbers are a set.
the standard mathematical concept of a mapping from N -> N where n is
mapped to 2n. In this standard notion, all numbers are doubled, and we
encounter no undoubled even natural numbers.
Multiplying n by 2 does not yield the same number.It is true because the interval covered by the doubled numbers isThe interval is infinite. "Doubling" an infinite set yields a set of
twice as large as the interval covered by the numbers to be doubled.
the same size as the original - there is a 1-1 correspondence between
them.
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