Magnus Anderson
LuckyR
You wouldn't expect completion from a thread titled "Infinity" would you?
Banno
It is defined as a bijection. — Magnus Anderson
Magnus Anderson
N0? — Banno
It is defined as f(n)=n−1 and then shown to be a bijection. That definition does not mention bijectivity at all. At this stage, the function could turn out to be injective, surjective, neither, or both. Nothing is being smuggled in. — Banno
Banno
Here's the definition again:Not N0 but f(n) = n - 1. That function is a bijection by definition. — Magnus Anderson
An odd thing to say, since making that implication explicit is exactly what the proof presented above does. you treat as if it secretly meant "let be a bijection defined by "; but that is not what is being done. What was done, step by step, was:Yes. It is not explicitly stated in the definition. However, the definition implies it. — Magnus Anderson
Magnus Anderson
Here's the definition again — Banno
bijectivity would again depend on proof, not stipulation — Banno
f(n)=n−1 might be bijective, non-surjective, or non-injective depending on the domain and codomain. — Banno
Banno
Yep. that's what a proof does.When I say the function is bijective by definition, I do not mean that bijectivity is explicitly stated, but that it is an unavoidable consequence of the definition. The "proof" consists solely in unpacking what is already implied by the definition, not in adding any further stipulation. — Magnus Anderson
Metaphysician Undercover
Not really, but ignoring the infinite level of irrelevance of the topic is a pretty important omission. — LuckyR
Well, no. It is defined as f(n)=n−1 and then shown to be a bijection. — Banno
Yep. that's what a proof does. — Banno
Esse Quam Videri
Banno
SophistiCat
Banno
Explicitly specifying a function is acceptable as a constructive proof. Constructivism shares some concerns with finitism, but it is not as bonkers stringent. — SophistiCat
SophistiCat
The cost here is the rejection of succession (roughly, that for every number there is another number that is one more than it; or more accurately, that we can talk about such an infinite sequence); and consequently the rejection of the whole of Peano mathematics. No small thing. — Banno
Banno
Magnus Anderson
Metaphysician Undercover
Both of you have raised worries about the “doability” of bijection for infinite collections, which suggests a rejection of the identification of existence with formal definability and consistency. That’s a substantive philosophical position. But if that’s the objection, then it isn’t a matter of showing that the usual definitions lead to contradictions (they don’t), but of rejecting the underlying framework. — Esse Quam Videri
Framed that way, the disagreement would look less like an accusation about the failure of proof and more like a clash of foundational commitments, which is where I suspect the disagreement really belongs. — Esse Quam Videri
Magnus's objections are framed as an internal problem with a proof, when they should be framed as external problems with the process being used. — Banno
If Magnus rejects the very idea of infinite totalities... — Banno
So constructivism will not help Magnus here. He must resort to finitism - the view that why for any number we can construct its successor, we can't thereby construct the infinite sequence N
. — Banno
Banno
This is false, since that definition applies only to finite sets. For infinite sets, we need something more. Consider that the even numbers form a proper subset of the integers, and yet we could count the even numbers... a bijection.1) To say that S is larger than S' means that S' is a proper subset of S.
( A definition that applies to all sets, regardless of their size. ) — Magnus Anderson
Magnus Anderson
This is false, since that definition applies only to finite sets. — Banno
Magnus Anderson
If your finitism is such that you cannot see that — Banno
Banno
Well, it's not just me...That's a lie you've been shamelessly pushing forward. — Magnus Anderson
Magnus Anderson
Banno
Where do you think this claim appears in the proof?The first fallacious proof they use to show that N and N0 are of the same size is the observation that, if you add 1 to infinity, you still get infinity. — Magnus Anderson
The proof doesn't just "define a symbol for a bijection"; it provides an explicit function:The second fallacious proof they use is grounded in the premise that, if you can come up with a symbol that is defined as bijection between N and N0, it follows that a bijection between N and N0 exists ( i.e. it's not a contradiction in terms. ) — Magnus Anderson
What is defined here is a function, not a symbol. This is a concrete mapping, not a mere linguistic construct, and it suffices to show that a bijection exists.f is a function from the natural numbers ℕ to the natural numbers including zero ℕ₀ such that for each natural number n, f(n) is equal to n minus 1.
Magnus Anderson
What is defined here is a function, not a symbol. This is a concrete mapping, not a mere linguistic construct, and it suffices to show that a bijection exists. — Banno
Srap Tasmaner
Magnus Anderson
Isn't it clear that this works, and that there can be no set of objects you could label starting at 0 that you couldn't also label starting at 1? — Srap Tasmaner
LuckyR
Oh I'm not referring to the concept of infinity, that you correctly note is important. Rather what the OP specifically referenced, which is the infinite numbers between infinitely minute numbers.Why do you say the topic is irrelevant"? The concept of infinite is commonly used in mathematics, so there must be at least some relevance.
Srap Tasmaner
Isn't it clear that this works, and that there can be no set of objects you could label starting at 0 that you couldn't also label starting at 1?
— Srap Tasmaner
You can't do that. Logic prohibits it. There are more "labels" in N0 than there are in N. — Magnus Anderson
Banno
That's a group of symbols... so you mean the ? And your claim is that the definitionThe symbol we're talking about is this: — Magnus Anderson
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.