Nope. I already gave you a counterexample to this.
No, this is a new (3) case (|X| is a transfinite cardinal in the new (3) case, which is something that was not a fact in the old (3) case). Please read it carefully again according to the changes that have been done at post
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4953821&postcount=5533 .
Again:
The new case (your counterexample does not work):
1) X is a set and any member of X (if exists) is a set.
2) If X is an infinite set, then |X| is a transfinite cardinal.
3) If |X| is a transfnitie cardinal (which means that X is an infinite set (see 2)), such that |X| > the cardinality of any member of X AND any member of X is a finite set, then |X| is the smallest transfinite cardinal.
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The old case (your counterexample works):
1) X is a set and any member of X (if exists) is a set.
2) If |X|(the cardinality of X) > the cardinality of any member of X , then |X| is a transfinite cardinal.
3) If |X|(the cardinality of X) > the cardinality of any member of X and the cardinality of any member of X is a finite cardinal ((2) is not satisfied in the case of finite cardinals) , then |X| is the smallest transfinite cardinal.
We are no longer in the old case.
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So, according to the new case:
The set of natural numbers is N={ {{}}, {{},{{}}}, {{},{{}},{{},{{}}}}, ... }
The set of even numbers is E={ {{},{{}}}, {{},{{}},{{},{{}}},{{},{{}},{{},{{}}}}} ... }
and |E| = |N| because (according to (3)) both of them are the smallest transfinite cardinal.
Now:
K={ { {{}}, {{},{{}}}}, {{},{{}},{{},{{}}}}, ... }, {{}} , {{},{{}}} , {{},{{}},{{},{{}}}} , ... }
and according (3) |K| is not the smallest transfinite cardinal because one of the members of K is an infinite set (which is not true in the case of N and E non-finite sets).
(By the way, your any's really should be every's. All would work equally well.)
All does not have any meaning in the case of non-finite sets, and this is exactly my argument against Cantor's reasoning (he takes a notion that has a meaning only in the case of finite sets, and forces it on non-finite sets).
Really? Cantor used your non-local concept? When and where, exactly did he do that?
He does not have to. Forcing
All on a non-finite set is equivalent to the argument that non-finite localities are Non-locality.