• @[email protected]
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    -27 months ago

    That is the way it is often taught but actually both sets are infinite that is have no ends or in other words are not bounded.

    The thing that is confusing to understand is that the question how many there are and how much there is diverges at infinity.

    Our intuition (as finite beings) is broken here. Both sets are infinite but in one is more than in the other. That does not make one set more infinite than the other. You cannot be more unending than to literally have no end.

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      This is incorrect. There is not a one-to-one and onto mapping from the natural numbers to the real numbers ergo the sets have a different size. We have defined words to describe this. We can put uncountably many copies of the natural numbers inside of the real numbers so there are arguably infinitely more reals than naturals.

      Granted you have to accept the axiom of choice for any of this.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        I know. I’ve studied this extensively. I am specialized in formal logic and by extension set theory. I’ve worked with and help write actual research papers in this field where this is basic knowledge.

        I’ve never claimed there to be a bijection between the reals and the natural numbers. Please point out what statement I made that is wrong. I would very much like to know.

        Also no you do not have to accept choice for this to be true. ZF is perfectly acceptable to study various infinite sets with differing cardinality.

        Edit: This is what I mean when I say that our intuition is broken. One set can be larger than the other but both be non-ending that is infinite.

        Beeing larger does not mean it is more infinite!

        • @[email protected]
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          27 months ago

          That does not make one set more infinite than the other. You cannot be more unending than to literally have no end.

          Your use of language is incorrect. But, since you’re clearly the only published expert with any experience in this topic on the internet, it’s really not worth pointing out that we fall on two sides of the standard axiom of choice debate since you already knew that. Have fun!

          • @[email protected]
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            17 months ago

            My use of language could very well be incorrect. I am not a native English speaker anyways. That’s no reason to be so condescending.

            I was just merely stating my credentials to have a basis of discussion but you do not seem to be interested in that.