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On 12/7/2024 6:09 AM, WM wrote:There are no more than finitely many natural numbers which can be shown.On 06.12.2024 19:17, Jim Burns wrote:On 12/6/2024 3:19 AM, WM wrote:On 05.12.2024 23:20, Jim Burns wrote:I will, after you>>⎜ With {} NOT as an end.segment,>
all endsegments hold content.
But no common.to.all finite.cardinals.
Show two endsegments which
do not hold common content.
show me a more.than.finitely.many two.
This is not gibberish but mathematics:You (WM) define it that way,>>⎜ there STILL are>
⎜ more.than.finite.many end.segments,
Not actually infinitely many however.
More.than.finitely.many are enough to
break the rules we devise for finitely.many.
More than finitely many are finitely many,
which turns your arguments into gibberish.
Each finite.cardinalitySo it is. Each finite cardinal cannot turn a finite set into an infinite set. But even for infinite sets we have
cannot be more.than.finitely.many
⎜ If n is a finite.cardinal, thenIt is.
⎜ n is.less.than n+1, and n+1 is finite.
⎝ n cannot be more.than.finitely.many.
More than finitely many are finitely many,Call it 'potential'.
unless they are actually infinitely many.
Therefore they are not enough.
None of that changes thatand leaves the set finite. But even for infinitely many n:
each finite.cardinal is followed by
a finite.cardinal,
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