But set theory can't do that and be recursively axiomatized, because there is no algorithm to determine whether a given sentence contradicts a previous set of statements. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Suggesting the paradox is an artifact of language and no real part of set theory. — tim wood
By the axioms, there is no set x such that every set y is a member of x.
That's not childishness; it's axiomatic mathematics. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok.Consider three sets A, B, C that do not contain themselves. There are a lot of such sets, but let's suppose these three are all of them. — tim wood
Consider set D defined as the set of all sets that do not contain themselves. — tim wood
Ok.That is, D contains A, B, C. D is certainly a set. — tim wood
And D does not contain itself. — tim wood
By the axioms, there is no set x such that every set y is a member of x. [...]
— TonesInDeepFreeze
You have not proven this. You have just stated it. — Philosopher19
Again, you are defending a contradiction. — Philosopher19
Consider that it is you who is being dogmatic and not me. — Philosopher19
AGAIN, you have not shown that "there does not exist a set of which all sets are a member" is contradictory. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I refer to axioms and inference rules — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is in the definition of the semantic of "set" — Philosopher19
an axiom I showed as being false — Philosopher19
Call the set of all sets X. Call any set that is not X, a Y. X contains all Ys plus itself. Every set Y is a member of X. Show me how this is contradictory. — Philosopher19
I will repeat the last part of the beginning of this post again: It is contradictory to say you can have more than one X, but there's no such thing as a set of all Xs. — Philosopher19
I have addressed the "axiom" which you present as an objection to the set of all sets. — Philosopher19
Do you not see that you have hurled insults at me accusing me of not giving you proof — Philosopher19
suggesting that you gave me proof and then provide a link to something that you said to someone? — Philosopher19
I checked the link (in an attempt to be charitable) — Philosopher19
I am rejecting the rejection of a set of all sets. — Philosopher19
Which axiom do you claim is false? — TonesInDeepFreeze
As long as we have taking of subsets, the inconsistency comes with the assumption that there is a set of all sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Essentially, I was looking for a reply to:
Call the set of all sets X. Call any set that is not X, a Y. X contains all Ys plus itself. Every set Y is a member of X. Show me how this is contradictory. — Philosopher19
Which axiom do you claim is false?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The above which I have underlined. — Philosopher19
Then there is an issue in the manner in which you take subsets. — Philosopher19
And I've read your 'V' stuff before, and I commented on it with exactness. But if you wish to engage me with the additions you've made now, then, to start, you need to clean up the incoherent notation. In a previous post, I suggested how you could do that, but you ignored. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I have no interest in trying to accommodate you any further. — Philosopher19
I think you have failed to prove your position — Philosopher19
we'll have to agree to disagree — Philosopher19
Which axiom do you claim is false?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The above which I have underlined.
— Philosopher19
What? The underlined passage is not an axiom of set theory. And it's your claim, not mine, so there's no reason for me to defend it. You are extremely confused. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A set can't contain itself. Period! — TheMadFool
A set can't contain itself. Period! — TheMadFool
Take K and make it an element of a set thus, {K} and what happens? It's, according to how it's defined, K again. That didn't quite go as planned, did it? — TheMadFool
{{K}} = {K} = K which in plain English means K can't be made a member of another set. — TheMadFool
The whole exercise involving K = {K} is akin to claiming that b × 1 =/= b. — TheMadFool
No, it was as "planned", and consistent (without reguarity). — TonesInDeepFreeze
That is argument by analogy, which is not valid for deduction such as mathematics. And the analogy even works against your claim. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Please address the proof. I'll restate it here. — TheMadFool
Suppose K = {K}. Let ~x=K and ~xeK. Then ~ {x K} = K but K e {x K}. — TonesInDeepFreeze
[the analogy] makes so much sense. — TheMadFool
Since it's a restatement, I don't need to address it again, — TonesInDeepFreeze
I gave you specific detail why the analogy doesn't work for you. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You haven't addressed it — TheMadFool
The analogy is perfect. — TheMadFool
There's a precise 1-to-1 correspondence between 2 and K — TheMadFool
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