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On 12/19/2024 9:50 AM, WM wroteThat means all numbers are lost by loss of one number per term. That implies finite endsegments.f(k) = E(k) = ⟦k,ℵ₀⦆⋂{E(1),E(2),...} is empty.>
Other numbers are not in the argument.
But E(1) is full.
The only way to get rid of content is
to proceed by
∀k ∈ ℕ:
∩{E(1), E(2), ..., E(k+1)} =
∩{E(1), E(2), ..., E(k)} \ {k},
i.e. to lose one number per term of
the function
f(k) = ∩{E(1), E(2), ..., E(k)}.
Yes,
after infinitely.many one.number.losses,
infinitely.many numbers are lost.
However,As long as any natural number remains, the sequence of lost numbers is finite (ended by the remaining number).
each number is not.after infinitely.many numbers,
each loss is not.after infinitely.many losses.
Finite intersections of endsegments preceding the empty intersection of all endsegments are dark.The empty termThere is no darkᵂᴹ or visibleᵂᴹ empty term.
⎛ Assume otherwise.For my argument I don't need empty endsegments.
If Cantor uses all indices for his bijections the intersection of all endsegments must be empty.The empty termOne.by.one and (darkᵂᴹ or visibleᵂᴹ) endlessly.
has lost all natnumbers one by one.
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