Banno
Consider an alphabet made up of symbols, each of which is a square of side length 1cm that is black below a line at height r cm above the base and white above that, where r can be any real number in the interval (0,1). Then the alphabet has the same uncountable cardinality as the real numbers, and a one-to-one map between the symbols and the reals is that which maps the symbol with line height r to the real number tan((r - 0.5) x pi / 2). — andrewk
Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc
Banno
i take offense to that as a long time crossword fanatic. — csalisbury
youd 'psychoceramic' this thread — csalisbury
mcdoodle
Banno
Michael
Consider an alphabet made up of symbols, each of which is a square of side length 1cm that is black below a line at height r cm above the base and white above that, where r can be any real number in the interval (0,1). Then the alphabet has the same uncountable cardinality as the real numbers, and a one-to-one map between the symbols and the reals is that which maps the symbol with line height r to the real number tan((r - 0.5) x pi / 2). — andrewk
andrewk
Better to focus on audible names, rather than spoken names, in order to transcend the limitations of the human larynx.What about pre-writing? Are spoken proper names countable? — Michael
Cabbage Farmer
I suppose I'd prefer to distinguish the number of proper names in a given universe from the number of proper names indicated by, say, a formal notational system of predicate logic. I'm not sure which of these you're question is aimed at. I suspect it may be a question about the notational system.Jim, Jeff, Jenny... that's three.
1 is the proper name for that number; 2 , for the next number. and on it goes. So there are at least countably infinite proper names.
Suppose I take the set of infinite lists of ones and zeros. I know from Cantor's diagonal that this is uncountable. So I give each its own name; are there then uncountably many proper names?
First-order predicate logic apparently assumes only a countable number of proper names: a,b,c...
How would it change if there were an uncountable number of proper names? — Banno
Mephist
Suppose I take the set of infinite lists of ones and zeros. I know from Cantor's diagonal that this is uncountable. So I give each its own name; are there then uncountably many proper names?
First-order predicate logic apparently assumes only a countable number of proper names: a,b,c...
How would it change if there were an uncountable number of proper names? — Banno
Terrapin Station
Mephist
ssu
Every mathematical object has a proper model of itself.... basically itself. So basically (not rigorously) it means that R=RPerhaps I'm missing something about uncountable sets. Can one set with aleph-1 elements be mapped to another set with aleph-1 elements?
So could an uncountable number of individuals be mapped to an uncountable number of names? — Banno
Terrapin Station
Mephist
Banno
Proper names only occur when someone thinks or says one. — Terrapin Station
Banno
Only a countable number of objects can be referred to individually, because there is only a countable number of names (aka 'constant expressions') that can be used to refer to them. — andrewk
It is readily proven that for any positive integer n, there is only a countable number of different n-tuples from a countable alphabet. One proves this by constructing a one-to-one map from the positive integers (which are countable) to the set of all such n-tuples.
It is also readily proven that a countable union of countable sets is countable (it is in fact the proof from the previous paragraph, applied to the case n=2). The set of all finite strings from a countable alphabet is the union, for n going over all positive integers, of the set of all strings of length n, each of which we know is countable from the previous paragraph. This is a countable union of countable sets, and hence countable. — andrewk
Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
There are integers that have never been thought or said. — Banno
Mephist
Terrapin Station
Mephist
Terrapin Station
For variables of logical propositions, they are only arbitrary strings or arbitrary length — Mephist
Mephist
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