I’d be interested to see if I’m barking up the wrong tree he — Wayfarer
So the set of all things would include itself provided a set is a thing. — Cuthbert
have been watching some documentary material on Georg Cantor and set theory. This gave rise to the following conundrum: I don’t think there could be a ‘set which includes everything’. Why? Because you implicitly then have two things - namely, everything, and also ‘a set which includes everything’. — Wayfarer
o doubt, SLX, you're familiar with one or more of these reference.) — 180 Proof
Alain Badiou - who takes set theory to be the best description of ontology that we have - makes a similar point but with an opposite conclusion. — StreetlightX
a 2007 BBC Documentary called Dangerous Knowledge. It's about four great and controversial mathematicians - Cantor, Boltzmann, Godel and Turing - all of whom died by suicide — Wayfarer
So if ‘everything’ includes ‘every possible set’ - which it must do, otherwise it would be incomplete - then there couldn’t be such a set, because it would have to include itself. — Wayfarer
Cantor retired in 1913, living in poverty and suffering from malnourishment during World War I.[33] The public celebration of his 70th birthday was canceled because of the war. In June 1917, he entered a sanatorium for the last time and continually wrote to his wife asking to be allowed to go home. Georg Cantor had a fatal heart attack on January 6, 1918, in the sanatorium where he had spent the last year of his life.[18]
suffering from malnourishment during World War I.
Cantor, Boltzmann, Godel and Turing — Wayfarer
set theory is regarded as the basis for number theory, no? — Wayfarer
(whatever "really" might mean as pertains to abstract objects — TonesInDeepFreeze
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.