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From: WM <wolfgang.mueckenheim@tha.de>
Newsgroups: sci.logic
Subject: Re: Incompleteness of Cantor's enumeration of the rational numbers
(extra-ordinary)
Date: Wed, 20 Nov 2024 12:42:15 +0100
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 19.11.2024 17:26, Jim Burns wrote:
> On 11/19/2024 6:01 AM, WM wrote:
>> That implies that
>> our well-known intervals
>
> Sets with different intervals are different.
> Our sets do not change.
The intervals before and after shifting are not different. Only their
positions are.
Is the set {1} different from the set {1} because they have different
positions? Is the set {1} in 1, 2, 3, ... different from the set {1} in
-oo, ..., -1, 0, 1,... oo?
> Sets of our well.known.intervals
> can match some proper supersets without growing
They cannot match the rational numbers without covering the whole
positive real line. That means the relative covering has increased from
1/5 to 1.
> Relative covering isn't measure.
It is a measure! For every finite interval between natural numbers n and
m the covered part is 1/5.
> You haven't defined 'relative covering'.
> Giving examples isn't a definition.
If you are really too stupid to understand relative covering for finite
intervals, then I will help you. But I can't believe that it is
worthwhile. Your only reason of not knowing it is to defend set theory
which has been destroyed by my argument.
> I claim that there are functions f:ℝ→ℝ
> such that
> ⟨ f(⅟1) f(⅟2) f(⅟3) ... ⟩ =
> ⟨ ⅟5 ⅟5 ⅟5 ... ⟩
> and f(0) = 1
Not in case of geometric shifting. All definable intervals fail in all
definable positions.
>
>> So you deny analysis or / and geometry.
>
> I deny what you think analysis and geometry are.
> I accept infinite sets
> and discontinuous functions
Discontinuity is not acceptable in the geometry of shifting intervals.
> What is it you (WM) accuse infinite sets of,
> other than not being finite?
Nothing against infinite sets. I accuse matheologians to try to deceive.
>
> Note:
> An infinite set
> can match some proper supersets without growing
I have proven that this is nonsense.
Regards, WM