Sujet : Re: How many different unit fractions are lessorequal than all unit fractions? (infinitary)
De : james.g.burns (at) *nospam* att.net (Jim Burns)
Groupes : sci.mathDate : 22. Oct 2024, 17:03:22
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <062a0fa5-9a15-4649-8095-22c877af5ebf@att.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 10/22/2024 4:13 AM, WM wrote:
On 21.10.2024 22:34, Jim Burns wrote:
On 10/21/2024 2:25 PM, WM wrote:
On 21.10.2024 14:30, Jim Burns wrote:
On 10/21/2024 6:01 AM, WM wrote:
The range.
>
A complete set of natural numbers.
ℕ is defined such that
n ∈ ℕ ⇔ ∃{0,1,...,n-1,n}
It is a complete set by assumption.
All its numbers can be mapped,
some of them not to the preimage.
>
Not to the mapped set.
The map we refer to is doubling.
max.{0,1,...,n-1,n} ↦
max.{0,1,...,n-1,n,n+1,...,n+n-1,n+n}
Name the map 2×
2×n = n+n
∀n ∈ ℕ:
∃{0,1,...,n-1,n}
∃{0,1,...,n-1,n,n+1,...,n+n-1,n+n}
n+n = 2×n
2×n ∈ ℕ
∀n ∈ ℕ: 2×n ∈ ℕ
All its numbers can be mapped,
Yes.
∃{0,1,...,n-1,n,n+1,...,n+n-1,n+n}
some of them not to the preimage.
No.
2×n ∈ ℕ
----
image 2×ℕ = {2×n: n∈ℕ}
n′ ∈ ℕ\2×ℕ ⇔
∃{0,1,...,n-1,n,n+1,...,n+n-1,n+n,n+n+1}
∧ n′ = n+n+1
'Bye, Bob.