We can now order our numbers and put all these numbers in a list because each has a unique a/b coordinate. This would order all the reals — Umonsarmon
Have you understood the proof? — Umonsarmon
No, I haven't read your proof. I don't need to, because I have read and understood Cantor's diagonal proof. That's all I need to know that Cantor is right. Unless you can show how the diagonal proof is wrong, Cantor's result stands. — SophistiCat
How odd, you dismiss an argument you don't understand and don't even try to. That sounds like some sort of dogma to me. — Umonsarmon
How odd, you dismiss an argument you don't understand and don't even try to. — Umonsarmon
It's not odd and it's not dogma. It's just straightforward logic: — SophistiCat
3) Starting at the middle line do the following .If the digit in your string is a 1 move half the distance to the next line to the right. If the digit is a 0 move half the distance to the next line to the left. — Umonsarmon
I'm not sure if the following is a proof that cantor is wrong about there being more than one type of infinity — Umonsarmon
That's what this should be about. Either all the mathematicians since Cantor have been idiots and retarded to not notice the fatal flaw in the proof or OP is wrong. What's the probability for each case.How is my proof wrong?
Actually, if two proofs prove contradictory things, then there is a problem with one or both of the proofs. To say I understand one, but not the other, and I accept the one that I understand, therefore the other is wrong, as SophistiCat did, is illogical because the acceptance of the one may be based in a failure to see that its unsound, a mistaken understanding. Until you can exclude the possibility of mistake from your understanding, it is illogical to reject demonstrations which would show that your understanding is mistaken. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think your procedure does produce an injection between the sets, but the initial set you're feeding into the injection is actually uncountable. You're mapping the real numbers to the real numbers rather than the real numbers to the rationals.
If you wanna see this, there's an uncountable infinity of real numbers whose first digit right of the decimal point is 1 in the binary expansion. The same goes for any binary digit. I think you're not registering the distinction between "the set of sets of real numbers with x in a given digit in their decimal expansion" and "this real number has x with a given digit in their decimal expansion". — fdrake
Well it seems theoretical physics seems to disagree with you there. The infinitely iterated infinite universe is exactly what they are proposing. — ovdtogt
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