jsfisher
ETcorngods survivor
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2005
- Messages
- 24,532
It speaks for itself.
Meaning you can't describe it. How surprising.
Last edited:
It speaks for itself.
The child? What do you need to see the child for? Just take my word for it: children are divided into two categories -- male and female -- as well. There is no additional missing category no matter what your diagonal argument tells you. But if you don't believe me, here is the proof:Where is the child?
Meaning you can't get a self evident truth. How not surprising.Meaning you can't describe it. How surprising.
Yes, the offspring, which is male or female, but he\she is not identical to his\her parents.The child?
Nothing was broken, by using <0,1> form, the set of natural numbers has a diferent code than any proper subset of it, exactly as shown in http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6808937&postcount=14090 .OMG!!! Arithmetic has suddenly stopped working. The natural correspondence between the natural numbers and the positive even numbers (i.e. f(i) = 2i) is now broken.
There are two distinct categories: 1) male, 2) female. Your version of the diagonal argument tells you that there must be at least one more category, that is category #3. What is the category? The domain is gender, and not any broader genetic inheritence issue that you try to sneak in to cover up your nonsense.Yes, the offspring, which is male or female, but he\she is not identical to his\her parents.
There are two distinct categories: 1) male, 2) female. Your version of the diagonal argument tells you that there must be at least one more category, that is category #3. What is the category? The domain is gender, and not any broader genetic inheritence issue that you try to sneak in to cover up your nonsense.
What is the 3rd category, Doron? The missing apple from here?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6809217&postcount=14098
Meaning you can't get a self evident truth. How not surprising.
I don't miss anything. You explained the consequence of the above pretty clearly:You still miss it.
The complement of the diagonal of the <0,1> forms is also an <0,1> form, which is not in the range of the collections of the <0,1> forms, exactly because it has a <0,1> code that is different than any <0,1> form of the given collection, whether this collection of distinct <0,1> forms is finite or not (or whether it is powerset or not).
The are two gender categories in the class Mammalia: male and female. According to your discovery, the gender categoris are not complete. What is the 3rd category?No epix, the diagonal argument is exactly a proof that any collection of finite or infinite distinct objects (whether the collection is powerset or not) is incomplete, because by using it one explicitly defines an object that has the same form of the distinct objects of a given collection, but it is not in the range of the given collection.
The collection is incomplete exactly because there is an object that is based on the same principle but it is not in the range of the collection of objects, which share with it this principle, because it is different than any object of that collection.I don't miss anything. You explained the consequence of the above pretty clearly:
The are two gender categories in the class Mammalia: male and female. According to your discovery, the gender categoris are not complete. What is the 3rd category?
You don't have too.The self truth of an axiom you cannot even express? Get real, Doron. We are not mind readers, here.
You don't have too.
The diagonal method works on any collection of distinct objects (finite or not, powersets or not), and it is a self evident truth without any need of extra words.
Now you are talking. The third gender category could be called "The Pink Chicken of Perpetual Motion."The collection is incomplete exactly because there is an object that is based on the same principle but is not in the range of the collection of objects, which share with it this principle, because it is different than any object of that collection.
The set theory is completely and utterly disconnected from the way nature works, and so the male/female incomplete category doesn't apply here as an argument. If there was any relation between the nature and its ways and means, the set theory would be born much sooner than it was. The reason it arrived so late was that no one needed it to climb from the well of the dark ages.The purpose of set theory is not practical application in the same way that, for example, Fourier analysis has practical applications. To most mathematicians (i.e. those who are not themselves set theorists), the value of set theory is not in any particular theorem but in the language it gives us.
As can clearly be seen, there is no 1-to-1 correspondence between the natural numbers and the even numbers.
Code:1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ... ↔ {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,...} ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ ↕ 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 ... ↔ {2,4,6,8,...}
As can clearly be seen, there is no 1-to-1 correspondence between the natural numbers and the even numbers.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6808813&postcount=14086 it is a self evident truth without any need of extra words.No it doesn't, and no it isn't. You would have to be self-delusional to believe that.
Axioms are essentially not provable because they are self evident truths.proving axiom is considered a redundant endeavor.
Only if the Cantorean approach is used.The set theory is completely and utterly disconnected from the way nature works,
That's what I call icing on the cake . . .
At least there is a partial "1-to-1" correspondence that saves the set theory from a complete and humiliating collapse.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=6808813&postcount=14086 it is a self evident truth without any need of extra words.