ω is N in its usual order. — fishfry
ω+1 is N in the funny order: — fishfry
ω+1 as an alternate ordering of the natural numbers — fishfry
is the change from ω-street to ε-street a "can't get theah from heah" transition? I see the language that says you just add a successor, but what successor would that be? — tim wood
By "successor" I understand some number, as 3 is the successor to 2, 4 to 3, and so forth. — tim wood
we can both agree that mere familiarity with terms doesn't get a person very far. — tim wood
all the successors have already been used — tim wood
With zero and 1, I take it a person can get to any number in {0, 1, 2,.., n}, though perhaps not efficiently. The limit of that being ω. — tim wood
Yes, 'x is an ordinal iff x is the order-type of a well ordered set' is a theorem. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Necessarily not everything was perfectly pedantic. So you missed that point entirely. — fishfry
A number of your statements were flat out wrong, — fishfry
such as claiming that a bijection of a well-ordered set to itself is necessarily another well-order. — fishfry
I had already given the counterexample of the naturals and the integers. — fishfry
Your several posts to me seemed not just pedantic, but petty, petulant, and often materially wrong. — fishfry
You either misunderstood the pedagogy or the math itself — fishfry
a long list of topics to be studied before one can read my article. — fishfry
The challenge is to write something that can be read by casual readers WITHOUT any mathematical prerequisites. — fishfry
"Yes, 'x is an ordinal iff x is the order-type of a well ordered set' is a theorem." followed by some picky complaint. — fishfry
I led with "x is an ordinal iff x is the order-type of a well ordered set" because that's something that I can explain to a casual audience in a couple of paragraphs. — fishfry
Likewise your persistent complaint that I omitted the fact that I am talking about total orders (which you called "connected" for reasons I didn't understand). — fishfry
I [...] decided to implicitly assume total orders to make the exposition more readable. — fishfry
If you would take a moment to ask yourself, "How would I explain ordinal numbers in a fair amount of depth to a casual audience," you might come to understand some of the tradeoffs involved. — fishfry
That's fine, and I didn't fault you for it. I merely added a point of clarification. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I posted to clarify certain points and to keep my mind focused a little bit on math occasionally. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I think of tradeoffs virtually every time I post, since in such a cursory context of posting, I too have take some shortcuts. The fact that I added clarifications and information doesn't entail that I don't understand that an overview can't cover every technicality. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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