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On 07.03.2025 16:08, Jim Burns wrote:On 3/7/2025 4:23 AM, WM wrote:
You assume that>
only
{} and its curly.bracket.followers are in Z₀
That is what
the intersection of all Zermelo-inductive sets
produces.
<<JB<WM>>><</JB<WM>>>>>
You need not the intersection however
because
Z₀ can also be defined by
{ } ∈ Z₀, and
if {{{...{{{ }}}...}}} with n curly brackets ∈ Z₀
then {{{...{{{ }}}...}}} with n+1 curly brackets ∈ Z₀.
No.
I said (way back when) thatYou didn't say that, above.>
Instead, you said pretty much the opposite, above,
saying that intersection (making 'only') isn't needed.
I said that
the intersection isn't needed when
instead of Zermelo's approach
{} and its curly bracket followers are used.
It is relevant where nothing more is known thanThe description ∀a: a ↦ {a} of a set>
says
that each thing in the set
has its Zermelo.sequence in the set.
>
{}, {{}}, {{{}}}, ...
is
the Zermelo.sequence of {}
It is what Zermelo calls
the sequence of numbers.
>Bob, {Bob}, {{Bob}}, ...>
is the Zermelo.sequence of Bob.
>
Kevin, {Kevin}, {{Kevin}}, ...
is the Zermelo.sequence of Kevin.
>
⎛ Everything in a Zermelo.sequence
⎜ has its Zermelo.sequence
⎜ contained in the over.sequence.
That is true but irrelevant when
only {} and its curly bracket followers are used.
Can you say what those are without intersection?Zermelo's Axiom of Infinite asserts>
the existence of ONE OF those or similar sets
with AT LEAST only {}, {{}}, {{{}}}, ...
That indefinite set is referred to as Z
And {} and its curly bracket followers
is referred to as Z₀.
You have just now added another clause to>>Induction says what's IN Z₀>
More description is needed.
Therefore there is no Bob.
Induction alone,
yiels {} and its curly bracket followers.
And now try to find a difference toFISONs are finite von Neumann ordinals.
F(1) and F(n) --> F(n+1).
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