Your picture of all of this is much too woozy
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am sorry if that is true — Gregory
Instead of points one works with lattices of open sets. I don't see this as improving the intuitive understanding of continua. Continuity in elementary topological spaces rests upon the idea of connectedness. The topology of the reals is fairly well established, so maybe start by studying this. — jgill
when open sets L and R are used to define a Dedekind cut L|R for an irrational number r, the generated closed set [r] is disjoint from both L and R, and yet their union equated with the continuum. — sime
I'm saying that if L| R is a Dedekind cut consisting of two open sets — sime
then the union of L, L|R and R is a disjoint partition of the continuum, — sime
I believe you should review the definition of Dedekind cuts. First, they can't be open sets, since (as Tones pointed out) L and R are sets of rationals. — fishfry
I meant L and R to refer to open sets of rationals — sime
In my case, i am stressing the benefits of a "top down" approach, in which one uses lattice theory to define a lattice of abstract elements that is isomorphic to the open sets of the rationals extended by end points. — sime
Can you give me an example of an open set of rationals? — fishfry
I think it is good you are getting back into the discussion. Who knows what might come out of this thread? My only reservation - and ignore if you like - is to perhaps not bring up the Stern–Brocot tree. — jgill
The argument that MoK gave involved the real numbers and their ordering, and real intervals, and his own confused notion of infinitesimals. He gave a definition of 'continuum' that sputtered. And he argued that the reals are not a continuum. His arguments were a morass. And given his personal definition of 'a continuum', he was refuted that the reals are not one. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If I'm not mistaken, no non-empty set of rationals is open in the reals. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Define 'continua'. Preferably a mathematical definition. And most preferably not free-floating, hand-waving verbiage. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I did convince myself that if you take the rationals by themselves, you can define a topology by all the "open" intervals (p,q) with p and q rationa — fishfry
Yes, usually it is inherited from the usual topology on the reals. But ignoring the non-reals seems OK. Looks like it is connected as well. But not a linear continuum since it doesn't have the LUB property. Rusty here I"m afraid. — jgill
Ok. You are disconnecting Q at a point that does not exist in Q. Thought you were restricting all points to Q. Usual approach to this is to assume the underlying reals. — jgill
For a moment I was thinking q^2<2 normally is q<sqr(2) for positive q, but if irrationals do not exist this inequality is invalid. — jgill
Twelve pages and I do not pretend to be able to follow all the math. A succinct report would be nice from anyone inclined to provide. Has it been established that the existence of the continuum is strictly a matter of definition — tim wood
Define 'continua'. Preferably a mathematical definition. And most preferably not free-floating, hand-waving verbiage. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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