It seems to me you have to consider all three of these in comparing uncountable to countable and all the other comparisons. Are we sure there are even only these 3 ways of assessing infinity? — Gregory
No, I don't agree with your argument. The odds numbers don't line up with the whole numbers (you say), but you say they are equal infinities. — Gregory
You can prove "uncountable" infinities don't line up with the whole numbers either, but maybe they are equal as well. — Gregory
Until you prove that "uncountable" cannot be lined up with the wholes you haven't proven Cantor right. The diagonal shows that there are numbers not in the wholes, but there are evens not in the odds. I don't see the argument for why you can't just start at zero and line any infinity up with any other — Gregory
How much math must one know to understand this Catorian proof? It seems to me infinity is everywhere and nowhere, speaking of abstract infinity that is. You might not know how to start a bijection of the reals to the wholes, but I say start with any member, and then another and so we have bijection to 1 and 2. Send them off infinity like you do comparing whole to odd, and walla we have Aristotle's result — Gregory
Mathematical points are purely conceptual entities, like justice; or fictional entities like chess pieces. — fishfry
x is finite if and only if there is a 1-1 correspondence between x and a natural number — GrandMinnow
"It's legal for finite, not infinite" makes no sense. You can inform yourself about the subject with introductory textbooks. — GrandMinnow
Whatever you have in mind, it does not contradict that definitions are not "illegal moves". — GrandMinnow
, you must mean that f doesn’t exist, which you believe is not the case if you answered “yes” to my question above.pairing up odd numbers with natural numbers by sliding the former back is an illegal move — Gregory
We aren’t literally sliding back the odd naturals. After all, they’re abstract entitities and thus can’t be changed. What we can very easily prove is this:I don't see the relationship between your equation and moving all the odd numbers back without changing its infinity. I mean I get the equation, but it has no operative power to slide back the odds without consequence. — Gregory
It’s similar to when I say, “The Cologne Cathedral is higher than St. Peter's Basilica”, and then you say, “No, St. Peter's Basilica is longer and wider than the Cologne Cathedral. I’m shocked professional architects compare buildings by their height. Nothing of this means anything.” Your statement about length and width is just as true as mine about height, but as it turns out, height is one of the most useful and important characters of buildings. Same with sets; cardinality is applicable to every set and, as it turns out, gives us very useful information and a rich theory, whereas some others, like measure or density, are only applicable in specific situations. Comparing sets by the subset relation is, of course, universally applicable, too, but it doesn’t give us a totally ordered hierarchy of infinities, unlike cardinality (the latter can be proved, but needs some work).The odd numbers are a specific infinity, half in density than the naturals. I am shocked professional mathematician try to compare otherwise by bijection. None of it means anything. — Gregory
Actually, you can. Let me give you the ordered pair (IN, nf), where IN is the set of all natural numbers and nf is the successor function n -> n+1 from IN into IN, and the ordered pair (IN’, nf’), where IN’ is the set of all odd natural numbers and nf’ is the odd successor function n -> n+2 from IN’ into IN’. Then you won’t be able to decide which pair is the ‘true’ structured set of the naturals. That’s because both have exactly the same structure. So, the odd naturals actually can ‘become’ the naturals. The same is true for the other direction.You can't put anything you like in place of odd numbers. — Gregory
Again, saying that comparing by equality and the subset relation has more truth than comparing by cardinality is like saying that comparing by length and width has more truth than comparing by height. That is not true. Both are equally valid. That the set of the odd naturals is a proper subset of the set of the naturals is equally true as the proposition that the two sets have the same cardinality.MAYBE the peel has as many points as the banana, but it's clear which is larger, and that has more truth — Gregory
Actually, Cantor’s proof has nothing to do with that. He proved that every set has a strictly smaller cardinality than its power set.The argument from Cantor is that all geometrical objects have the same infinity inside them. — Gregory
No, since one set can have the same cardinality as another and still be a proper subset of it and have only half its density.all geometrical objects have the same infinity inside them. If this is true, it upsets saying for sure that the odd numbers are half the naturals. — Gregory
Firstly, the part cannot be equal to the whole, and Cantor doesn’t imply that. A set is never equal to any of its proper subsets. Rather, some sets (the infinite ones, and no others) have the same cardinality as some of their proper subsets. That does not mean, however, that every two infinite sets can have the same cardinality. We have proven that above. Please don’t just take my word for it, but read Cantor’s proof, which I have given above, and understand every step of it. If you believe that something in there doesn’t seem sound, please tell me. I’d be happy to clarify.But then I don't see a clear reason why we couldn't say, considering that a circle inside a circle has the same points within it as the outside one, why countable infinities can't be equal to uncountable. If the part can be equal to the whole, as Cantor implies, then anything seems possible. — Gregory
I'll look into Cantor proof more today. — Gregory
Saying that infinities have two aspects, cardinality and density, confounds me. — Gregory
I never have rearranged the odd numbers to biject them to the naturals — Gregory
As Tristan L has so generously and perspicaciously explained, the proof adduces a one-to-one function from the naturals onto the odds, and that is all that is needed. — GrandMinnow
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