The Man said:
So you still assert your ‘Facts’ to be contradictory and “false”. That is still simply your problem. Where exactly is this “correction” that you asserted?
EDIT:
You actually assert that the statement "A ∈ A" is the statement "A = A".
By following this reasoning there is no difference between the identity of set A to itself and the identity of the member of set A, to set A.
In this case there is no difference between the concept of Set and the concept of Member of a given set, and since the concept Member is the concept of Set all we get is the statement "A = A" ("Set A is identical to itself").
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But unlike your reasoning, the statement "A ∈ A" is not the same as the statement "A = A" as follows:
A is a set.
"A = {A}" means that A is a member of itself (the statement "A ∈ A" is the statement "A = {A}").
Let as follow your assertion that statement "A ∈ A" is the statement "A = A":
If Member A is identical to Set {A}, then we get {A} as a member of itself,
such that A = {{A}}, which contradicts the assertion that the member of A is set A.
If Member {A} is identical to Set {{A}}, then we get {{A}} as a member of itself,
such that A = {{{A}}}, which contradicts the assertion that the member of A is set A.
…
If Member ...{{{A}}}... is identical to Set {…{{{A}}}…} , then we get {…{{{A}}}…} as a member of itself, such that A = {{…{{{A}}}…}}, which contradicts the assertion that the member of A is set A.
Etc... ad infinitum ...
In other words, the assertion that Member is identical to Set and vice versa is not satisfied, or in other words, it is always false (a contradiction).
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On the other hand the statement "A set is defined by its members" is always true (tautology).
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So The Man, Since by your reasoning "A=A" = "A∈A" = "A={A}", it is based on contradiction.
You simply do not distinguish between "defined by" (tautology) and "identical to" (contradiction) w.r.t Set and Member concepts.