I definitely believe in a set being a member of itself. I think it is a logical necessity. — Philosopher19
x (x, y, z).
Do you mean x = {x y z}?
— Philosopher19
Here, when we say x is a set of three sets that are members of themselves, we get a contradiction (it amounts to saying one set can be a member of itself twice — Philosopher19
nobody seemed to have recognised the impossibility of a set of all sets that are members of themselves. — Philosopher19
You just keep repeating yourself without coming to grips with the key points that refute you. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You have not shown that x = {x y z} implies a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It does not have such a subset as evidenced by such a subset being clearly contradictory. — Philosopher19
How do you possibly allow yourself to reject the set of all sets? — Philosopher19
a contradiction is clear in the following:
1) A set that contains all sets that are not members of themselves that is itself not a member of itself.
2) No set can logically encompass all sets. — Philosopher19
I don't think you read my post with enough attention to detail — Philosopher19
your belief system is contradictory precisely because it sees 2 as being rational/consistent, whereas 2 is clearly contradictory. — Philosopher19
I've understood your points — Philosopher19
x is a member of itself twice — Philosopher19
or x is a member of itself, with y and z not being members of themselves — Philosopher19
x is either no elements or x is some elements — TheMadFool
{x, {x, N}} - {x, N} = {{x, N} — TheMadFool
It fallacious to argue that, because N is written as '{x N}' in '{x {x N}}' but as 'N' in '{x N}', we have that {x N} is not in {x N}. It is fallacious to argue from the mere happenstance of two different means of notating the set. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It fallacious to argue that, because N is written as '{x N}' in '{x {x N}}' but as 'N' in '{x N}', we have that {x N} is not in {x N}. It is fallacious to argue from the mere happenstance of two different means of notating the set.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok. I've run out of options. Let's get straight to the brass tacks. — TheMadFool
First, do you understand my explanation that you just quoted? — TonesInDeepFreeze
IF there is a set of all sets, then it has a subset that is the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You see, right there, you skipped my point, posted at least three times now, that "member of itself twice" has no apparent set theoretic meaning. — TonesInDeepFreeze
By deriving a contradiction from the assumption that there does exist a set of all sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What you and mainstream set theorists seem to think is that this logically entails that the set of all sets is contradictory — Philosopher19
I have provided proof of this — Philosopher19
You seem to have not understood why I have said "member of itself twice" — Philosopher19
You've rightly recognised that a set of all sets that are not members of themselves that is itself not a member of itself is contradictory. — Philosopher19
There is nothing contradictory about the set of all sets. — Philosopher19
ZF is either inconsistent, or not comprehensive enough (which ultimately means it is inconsistent). — Philosopher19
This fierce dogma needs to die. — Philosopher19
It's always bothered me that there is no containing set as required by specification. — fishfry
Please stop using '=' to stand for the biconditional.
(1) N = {N} premise
(2) N e N <-> {N} e {N} from (1)
(3) ~ {N} e {N} non sequitur
Why do you waste our time? — TonesInDeepFreeze
But I don't get why someone would post arbitrary non sequiturs. — TonesInDeepFreeze
ZF has not been shown to be inconsistent. And lack of comprehensiveness does not imply inconsistency. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You're welcome.Thanks for starting this thread. — TheMadFool
Thus, a set N such that N = {N} can't exist. In other words, no set can contain itself and so Russell's paradox is a none issue. — TheMadFool
ZF implies incompleteness in proof, theory or system. — Philosopher19
the post that followed it suggests that you are upset, angry, or frustrated — Philosopher19
not a good state to be in when discussing matters of logic or pure reason. — Philosopher19
I think we should just agree to disagree. — Philosopher19
"something was done to it" is not a set theoretic predicate. — TonesInDeepFreeze
1. If C doesn't contain itself then C contains itself
2. If C contains itself then C doesn't contain itself
where C = the set of all sets that don't contain themselves.
If sets can't contain themselves, the consequent in 1 above and the antecedent in 2 above become meaningless for sets can't contain themselves. At least that's what I think. — TheMadFool
You cannot have a set of all sets that are members of themselves: How are you going to logically write this? — Philosopher19
I don't know what you think the operative meaning of that is. In any case, when you post nonsense and misinformation, I will decide for myself whether to rebut it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) Set theory is incomplete, therefore set theory is consistent. — TonesInDeepFreeze
There is plenty in this world to be angry and frustrated about. Your ignorant, arrogant, stubborn dogmatism is hardly one of them. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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