The amount of your bank account depends on your knowledge about it, and your knowledge is changeable by observation.
If you observation is focused only on "how many"? you have to ask yourself "what observation gives this knowledge"?
I have found that this observation is not less than Relation\Element Interaction, where the relation in this case is + and the Element is some agreed unit measurement.
In this case, the order between the units is ignored and only the sum (the amount) is considered.
But this amount cannot be known unless REI is used.
I have found that Relation is always non-local where an Element can be local or non-local during REI.
I had a professor back in the seventies who was highly innefective because he was incapable of answering student questions. When a question was asked of him, he'd either answer with something irrelevant to the question or repeat word for word what he'd said before. This was very aggravating.
I'm never able to get an answer from you that is spot on, except perhaps for "no." But then I don't know where I have strayed because the fog has not cleared.
But I suppose the following is as close as it is going to get.
In this case, the order between the units is ignored and only the sum (the amount) is considered.
By conventional arithmetic my bank accounbt is saved from chaos. That there is an established method that yields an agreed amount to all accontants.
By these conventions, I can't go withdraw billions that aren't there, because I say that no quantity in a set is complete and definite.
Accounting counts only what you call the "serial" aspect of number. Contextual to that usage you can talk "complete" and "definite."
Of course that doesn't mean the amount is fixed. Change happens.
Empericist that I am, I agree that the bottom line is observation.
I've said before that you have a differerent concept of what is number.
You've denied that. But when it comes to what you call your "parallel" aspects of Organic Natural Numbers, you really do. It's not the way most people think of number. Most don't get to the concept of number till things are counted.
I have so many questions like:
When and why is a number reckoned but not counted?
Is any number always "metaphysically" present so that it is the virtual amount or a virtual member of any set?
But it seems I should ask Professor Holbrook these questions.