Metaphysician Undercover
The cardinality of the set of real numbers is aleph_1 — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
The cardinality of the set of real numbers is aleph_1 — TonesInDeepFreeze
ssu
Cantor's proof was not by reductio ad absurdum — TonesInDeepFreeze
Metaphysician Undercover
TonesInDeepFreeze
my wording might not be rigorous — ssu
the sequence of cardinal numbers: aleph_0. aleph_1, aleph_2, aleph_3 and so on. The question is if this hierarchial system holds — ssu
if there is a cardinality or not between the naturals or the reals — ssu
The continuum hypothesis is that the reals is the next aleph, that there isn't anything else. — ssu
the diagonal argument — ssu
ssu
Cantor proved that you cannot make a bijection between the natural number to the reals, hence the reals aren't aleph_0 like for example rational numbers.The continuum hypothesis is that the cardinality of the set of reals is aleph_1. That is equivalent to saying that there is no uncountable subset of the set of reals that is not 1-1 with the set of reals. Of course, no matter the continuum hypothesis, there are cardinals greater than aleph_1. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When you first assume that there is a bijection between the natural numbers and reals, then show that there is a real that cannot be in this bijection, that is a reductio ad absurdum.The diagonal argument given by Cantor was not a reductio ad absurdum. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
Cantor proved that you cannot make a bijection between the natural numbers to the reals, hence the [cardinality of the] reals [is not] aleph_0 like for example [the cardinality of the] rational numbers. — ssu
When you first assume that there is a bijection between the natural numbers and reals — ssu
TonesInDeepFreeze
ssu
TonesInDeepFreeze
When you construct "a denumerable binary sequence not in the range of f", aren't you deriving that contradiction? — ssu
the set of natural numbers and rational numbers have the same cardinality, there is a direct proof (the set of rational numbers can be well ordered — ssu
ssu
Countable, right. Thanks for the correction.Showing a well ordering of the set of rational numbers is not adequate for showing that the set of rational numbers is countable. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Very easy: aleph-1. The the infinite cardinal of the real numbers
Because I think there's still something for us to understand with infinity, it isn't so easy that to use finite logic. And more interestingly, bigger infinities seem not to be usefull for example in physics, computing, etc. — ssu
TonesInDeepFreeze
Agent Smith
TonesInDeepFreeze
ssu
Agent Smith
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
ℵ1 (the reals?) — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
I addressed that about half a dozen times in posts above. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
Agent Smith
TonesInDeepFreeze
Agent Smith
But this part of what you wrote is correct: The continuum hypothesis is equivalent to the assertion that there is no set that has cardinality strictly greater than the cardinality of the set of naturals and strictly less than the cardinality of the set of reals. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
So we're looking for an infinity bigger than N and smaller than R. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith
TonesInDeepFreeze
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