You do not understand that Aleph0 is a size > the size of a collection of distinct elements. Cantor did not understand that by defining Aleph0 he goes beyond the concept of collection.
No Doron, you are the one who does not understand, as always. Aleph-0 is defined in terms of collections. Hence, it does not "go beyond" the concept of collection. Have you ever even read a book on basic set theory?
A curve is a dimensional space > collection of ordered pairs, exactly as Aleph0 size > the size of the collection of natural numbers, simply because the size of any collection of distinct objects (whether it is a collection of natural numbers, rational numbers or irrational numbers) is not satisfied.
Nonsensical gibberish. A curve
is a collection of ordered pairs (when in two dimensions). You are arguing with definitions again, like a fool.
If we define it as the set of all distinct irrational numbers then 0.101110111011... is not one of the members of this set (because irrational numbers do not have repetitions over scales as rational numbers have) so what you say is simply nonsense.
No, you are the one using rational numbers in your set of irrationals, not me. Quit trying to rub off your blunders and failures onto others. If you want to give decimal expansions of irrationals, you have to make it clear that it does not terminate or repeat.
And the highlighted term is nonsensical. If you want to introduce new terminology, you have to define it. I see that this is just ultimately a repeat of an old classic over at Physics Forums:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=10076
Furthermore, by using the diagonal method on the set of all real numbers, it is easy to define a new number that is not a member of this set.
Add the diagonal method to the list of elementary analysis concepts that you don't understand.
EDIT: To be more precise from my previous wording, the diagonal method can only be applied between a known countable set (the natural numbers) and an uncountable set to prove that there is no bijection from the countable set to the uncountable one. One set MUST be countable, because the diagonal method relies on the ability to make a list. You are trying to apply the diagonal method from an uncountable set to another uncountable one, which is complete nonsense.
In other words, the collection of all distinct real numbers is unsatisfied, by definition.
You don't even understand the definitions, Doron.
Please pay attention that no bijection has been used here in order to prove the incompetence of the collection of real numbers.
I don't know about proving the "incompetence" of the real numbers, but you've certainly proved your own incompetence.