dafydd
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2008
- Messages
- 35,398
I don't see the point either, maybe we should lerk from each other for a while.
Lerk?
I don't see the point either, maybe we should lerk from each other for a while.
You mean YOUR INITIAL ASSERTION. The evolution of human species has been merciful enough to extinct the part of the brain where the notion of "complete infinite set" could later materialize. That's why Homo habilis never made it to China, except for two: male and female.Conclusion:
Our initial assertion that there is a complete infinite set, is false.
Lerk?
Have you ever visited a crop circle?This must be the result of me trying to debate something with you, rather like banging my head against a brick wall.
I suggest we stop banging our heads against this brick wall and take a more light hearted approach.
I was interested to hear how many instruments you play, do you play a folk repertoire?
My brother plays fiddle and guitar in a folk band doing gigs around the midlands.
Have you ever visited a crop circle?
What made you to enter the field? The curious indent or something else?Yes, although at the time I didn't know what a crop circle was. It was before they were publicised.
I remember being puzzled, but didn't think much about it and carried on my walk.
What made you to enter the field? The curious indent or something else?
So you didn't walk along the tramline. But what made you to enter the field in the first place?I was walking through a field of wheat off the path, not something folk do these days, but at the time I would walk anywhere.
I didn't see it until I walked into a straight part of the design about 2 feet wide.
Now I think about it I can't place the time or place, which is odd as I can see clearly in my memory the wheat lying flat on the ground.
So you didn't walk along the tramline. But what made you to enter the field in the first place?
This part exists, for example, in The Man's and jsfisher's brains.You mean YOUR INITIAL ASSERTION. The evolution of human species has been merciful enough to extinct the part of the brain where the notion of "complete infinite set" could later materialize.
This must be the result of me trying to debate something with you, rather like banging my head against a brick wall.
I suggest we stop banging our heads against this brick wall and take a more light hearted approach.
I was interested to hear how many instruments you play, do you play a folk repertoire?
My brother plays fiddle and guitar in a folk band doing gigs around the midlands.
Sounds like your riding on the back of a turtle.
Anyone else going to join you?
Anyone else going to join you?
The Man's awareness is floating upon the surface of thoughts (emotionally and intellectually).
He does not have the needed simplicity to transcendent beyond the thoughts' process in order to be aware of the simplest state of awareness, which is the un manifested unified source of both physical and spiritual manifestations as a one organic realm.
This part exists, for example, in The Man's and jsfisher's brains.
Because of this part they will ask you: "Please show a natural number that is not a member of the set of all natural numbers".
My answer is:
"Even if all natural numbers are the members of the set of all natural numbers, this set exists exactly because there is an unclosed interval among the natural numbers, which guarantees the distinct existence of all natural numbers.
This unclosed interval demonstrates the incompleteness of any collection of distinct members, which enables the existence of distinct members, in the first place.
This fact is true for the set of all natural numbers, exactly as it is true for any possible collection with distinct objects, where one of these possible collections is the set of all real numbers.
Also this set has distinct members exactly because of the unclosed interval among the real numbers, which guarantees the distinct existence of all real numbers."
------------------------------------------------
In other words, actual completeness is exactly the unclosed interval, and no collection of distinct objects can close it simply because actual infinity is beyond the magnitude of any given collection of distinct members.
Cantor missed The Actual infinity exactly because he wrongly defined it in terms another number system, called Transfinite numbers, which are still closed under the notion of collection of distinct objects.
But also among the Transfinite numbers there is an unclosed interval, which guarantees the distinct existence of all of them.
Says a person that has no knowledge about the science of consciousness, which mostly was developed in the Eastern world, for the past 5000 years.
Originally Posted by epix
You mean YOUR INITIAL ASSERTION. The evolution of human species has been merciful enough to extinct the part of the brain where the notion of "complete infinite set" could later materialize.
Your problem is that you don't read about math stuff enough to know that "all" doesn't have the sole function of a limiting quantifier, as it is almost always the case with the word's common use.This part exists, for example, in The Man's and jsfisher's brains.
Because of this part they will ask you: "Please show a natural number that is not a member of the set of all natural numbers".
Examples of ALL:
I've been waiting all week to see her.
He had to walk all the way home.
She works all year round.
He'll need all the help he can get.
Someone took all the candy.
The Man, you simply can't comprehend that "1-dimensional element" , "line", "unclosed interval", etc... is the same magnitude that enable smaller magnitudes to be distinguished from each other.“In other words” simply meaning Doron has now replaced his “uncovered” line or line segment with an “unclosed interval” while still deliberately misusing the word “incompleteness” in reference to “any collection of distinct members”. Additionally once again, apparently deliberately, ignoring that the set of all natural numbers is closed under an integer operation of succession, which is why “all natural numbers are the members of the set of all natural numbers”.
Doron later asserts his “actual completeness is exactly” his “unclosed interval” the very aspect that he claims “demonstrates the incompleteness of any collection of distinct members”. So once again Doron simply, and perhaps deliberately, contradicts himself by claming that having his “unclosed interval” meaning his “actual completeness” , which he also claims is “beyond the magnitude of any given collection of distinct members”, is what “demonstrates the incompleteness of any collection of distinct members”. On the one hand “there is an unclosed interval among the natural numbers” that “demonstrates the incompleteness of any collection of distinct members”. While on the other hand his “actual completeness is exactly” that “unclosed interval” that is “beyond the magnitude of any given collection of distinct members.” As usual Doron remains the staunchest of just his own notions.
Says a person that evidently has no knowledge about meaning of the word 'science'.
epix, please read about Universal quantification ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_quantification ), before you air your view about this subject.Your problem is that you don't read about math stuff enough to know that "all" doesn't have the sole function of a limiting quantifier, as it is almost always the case with the word's common use.
In math, especially in the set theory, "all" is not used as an explicit quantifier -- it is replaced by the word "finite" -- but it is used as a qualifier. Once you define an object, such a natural number, "all", as an adjective, relates to a set of those objects that have the property described by their definition. So the term "the set of all prime numbers" doesn't mean that Euclid got his proof regarding the infinitude of primes wrong and that The Man and jsfisher can't navigate around, as you believe so.
This is sheer nonsense. Saying that A(upsidedown) gets only the property of the quantity of distinct objects of some collection," is inparsable, unless you define the term, "property of quantity," coz no such term exists outside your scribble.epix, please read about Universal quantification ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_quantification ), before you air your view about this subject.
The Universal quantification "for all" gets only the property of the quantity of distinct objects of some collection, without the needed understanding of what enables them to be distinct from each other, in the first place.
For example: The set of all real numbers does not exist if there is no co-existence between the non-local property of being real number AND the local property of being a particular real number.
Here is some concrete example of The Man's "reasoning":The Man said:Additionally once again, apparently deliberately, ignoring that the set of all natural numbers is closed under an integer operation of succession, which is why “all natural numbers are the members of the set of all natural numbers”.
Really?This is sheer nonsense. Saying that A(upsidedown) gets only the property of the quantity of distinct objects of some collection," is inparsable, unless you define the term, "property of quantity," coz no such term exists outside your scribble.
You are talking about the set of real numbers, without providing the must have terms, which enable their existence in the first place, exactly because you are unable to understand the co-existence of a rule (non-locality) and its particular expressions (localities).Your example involving the set real numbers depends on your invention and general incorporation of locality, which needs a narrow definition.
The rule exists at-once, in parallel, as non-locality among particular expressions (localities) of it, where no particular expression (locality) or collection of particular expressions (localities) is the non-local rule.Suppose that I say that there IS a coexistence between the non-local property of being real number AND the local property of being a particular real number. How are you going to prove otherwise without reverting to the argument of "serial-only, weak resoning?" You just can't formulate your statment in such a way that it would lead to a comprehensive proof.