We know, from the great Cantor's work, the cardinality of the set of Even numbers = cardinality of the set of Whole numbers. A part = The whole. — TheMadFool
What's 1 ÷ infinity? If it's 0 then infinity × 0 = 1?? — TheMadFool
In this way we can achieve arbitrary precision (infinite) on the value of the sqrt(2). — TheMadFool
I found this on wikipedia:
While the set of real numbers is uncountable, the set of computable numbers is classically countable and thus almost all real numbers are not computable
— wikipedia — TheMadFool
Right from the start of your argument, the merely ostensive (and not specified by actual mathematical description) list you gave is either actually not defined or it's finite. It ends with a certain value, yet doesn't specify how to squeeze in a countably infinite number of values in between the first and the last.Suppose the following is the complete list of computable irrational numbers between e and pi — TheMadFool
it is not the case that there does not exist a definable uncomputable real number. — GrandMinnow
Suppose the following is the complete list of computable irrational numbers between e and pi
— TheMadFool
Right from the start of your argument, the merely ostensive (and not specified by actual mathematical description) list you gave is either actually not definable or it's finite. — GrandMinnow
The negative statement was deliberately chosen. — GrandMinnow
the merely ostensive (and not specified by actual mathematical description) list you gave is either actually not definable or it's finite. — GrandMinnow
your assertion that there is no definable list of noncomputable reals — fishfry
So to make the countability argument work, maybe something like this in a set theoretic meta-theory for set theory: — GrandMinnow
No that's not right.There are a countably infinity of Turing machines hence a countable infinity of computable numbers, hence a bijection between the natural numbers and the noncomputable numbers. — fishfry
I think he made a typo and actually meant 'between the natural numbers and the computable numbers'. — GrandMinnow
That thread you linked to includes an argument that uses 'least undefinable ordinal' to throw shade on the "naive" notion of definability. — GrandMinnow
But one would not claim that 'definabie' itself is a predicate in the theory. — GrandMinnow
I only mentioned a certain syntactical fact - regarding formulas of a certain form. I wouldn't say in set theory itself, about set theory, that there exists a definable something or other. To even speak of that "something' is to speak of an object that exists per a set theoretic model, — GrandMinnow
but indeed, as we well know, set theory (if it is consistent, which I take as a "background" assumption) does not prove the existence of a model of set theory. (Though, I'm not expert enough to defend against possible other complications in the matter.) — GrandMinnow
I changed this post greatly:
So to make the argument work that there are only countably many definable real numbers, maybe something like this in a set theoretic meta-theory for set theory: — GrandMinnow
Let 'Rx' be the set theory formula 'x is a real number'. Let M be any model of set theory such that any subset S of the universe of M satisfies 's is countable' if and only if S is countable. Let D (the set of definable reals) be the subset of the universe of M by D = {d | there exists a formula F of set theory such that (E!x(Fx & Rx) is a theorem of set theory & d satisfies Fx and d satisfies Rx). Then D is countable. — GrandMinnow
set theory (if it is consistent [...]) does not prove the existence of a model of set theory.
— GrandMinnow
No, that's not right. Set theory is consistent if and only if there's a model. That's Gödel's completeness theorem. — fishfry
No, it is right. Yes, set theory is consistent if and only if there is a model of set theory. But if set theory is consistent then set theory itself doesn't prove that it has a model;. That's Godel's 2nd Incompleteness Theorem. — GrandMinnow
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