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On 30.11.2024 11:57, FromTheRafters wrote:Finite? Huh? The natural numbers don't stop at n! WTF!!!! Lay off the drugs.WM explained :Not quite but roughly. The precise definitions are:On 29.11.2024 22:50, FromTheRafters wrote:>WM wrote on 11/29/2024 :>>The size of the intersection remains infinite as long as all endsegments remain infinite (= as long as only infinite endsegments are considered).>
Endsegments are defined as infinite,
Endsegments are defined as endsegments. They have been defined by myself many years ago.
As what is left after not considering a finite initial segment in your new set and considering only the tail of the sequence.
Finite initial segment F(n) = {1, 2, 3, ..., n}.
Endsegment E(n) = {n, n+1, n+2, ...}
Almost all elements are considered in the new set, which means all endsegments are infinite.Every n that can be chosen has infinitely many successors. Every n that can be chosen therefore belongs to a collection that is finite but variable.
They are losing elements, one after the other:Try to understand inclusion monotony. The sequence of endsegments decreases.>
In what manner are they decreasing?
∀k ∈ ℕ : E(k+1) = E(k) \ {k}
But each endsegment has only one element less than its predecessor.
When you filter out the FISON, the rest, the tail, as a set, stays the same size of aleph_zero.For all endsegments which are infinite and therefore have an infinite intersection.>Then also the size of the intersection does not decrease.As long as it has not decreased below ℵo elements, the intersection has not decreased below ℵo elements.>
It doesn't decrease in size at all.
Look: when endsegments can lose all elements without becoming empty, then also their intersection can lose all elements without becoming empty. What would make a difference?
Regards, WM
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