|N| is the cardinality of natural numbers and |R| is the cardinality of the real numbers, and I use the fact that |N|<|R|, or in other words |N| and |R| are two different levels of infinity that can be used in order to observe the real-line.
Ok, |N| is the cardinality of natural numbers, |R| is the cardinality of reals. That is exactly the information I wanted.
Yes, |N| < |R|, but the language "two levels of infinity" is very imprecise. It is more precise to say that N is enumerable, and R is non-enumerable, meaning:
Natural numbers are the set {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, . . . N
k-2, N
k-1, N
k . . . }, this set is enumerable. In other words, it is possible to name every number in this set, given an infinite amount of time.
Rational numbers are the set of all numbers naturals numbers a and b of the form a/b:
{
{ N
1/N
1, N
1/N
2, N
1/N
3, . . . } ∪
{ N
2/N
1, N
2/N
2, N
2/N
3, . . . } ∪
{ N
3/N
1, N
3/N
2, N
3/N
3, . . . } ∪
. . .
}
This set is also enumerable. It is also clearly the cartesian product of N, so the cardinality of rationals > cardinality of naturals.
Real numbers are not enumerable, which is proved by Cantor's
diagonal argument.
To put this another way, N ⊆ R or ∀x{x∈N → x∈R}.
Formality out of the way, I want to comment on:
There are |N| place value keepers in ".000...", which are symbols at |N| level that are inaccessible to "...1", because it is a symbol at |R| level.
Show me how to construct C = 0.000...1 where C > 0.