doronshadmi
Penultimate Amazing
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- Mar 15, 2008
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The collection of natural numbers is clopen (where clopen, by a narrow view, means that the collection has minimal member but not maximal member).
First, let us use the narrow view of the clopen concept:
We can take a modular arithmetic form where any possible natural number is represented by a given point along a finite length, then we cut the circle at a point named 1, and transform the curved form into a clopen system of a straight line with a finite length (it is a clopen system because after the cut only one edge of the finite straight line is considered as the point that represent number 1).
Now the modular arithmetic form of all posible natural numbers along it, is rolled along the clopen finite straight line, where each tangent point is a 1-to-1 correspondence between the finite modular (circle) arithmetic form and the straight arithmetic form.
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Now, let us use the generalized view of the clopen concept:
Since both systems are clopen (by generalization no number is taken twice at each system), their accurate infinite cardinality is not satisfied.
Furthermore (now we are generalizing the notion of clopen by avoiding number's duplication along both circular and straight finite length forms), since a point along finite length (whether it has circular or straight form) represents one an only one number, then the clopen state holds for both circular and straight finite length forms, such that the accurate cardinality of Q or R is not satisfied.
Moreover, the order of the numbers, which are represented by points along both circular and straight finite length forms has no impact on the fact that both forms are clopen, and they are clopen because the cut is done at any given arbitrary point, which avoids number's duplication along both circular and straight finite length forms.
Since being clopen is a fact among any collection of distinct members, such collections (where their order is insignificant) do not have accurate infinite cardinality.
First, let us use the narrow view of the clopen concept:
We can take a modular arithmetic form where any possible natural number is represented by a given point along a finite length, then we cut the circle at a point named 1, and transform the curved form into a clopen system of a straight line with a finite length (it is a clopen system because after the cut only one edge of the finite straight line is considered as the point that represent number 1).
Now the modular arithmetic form of all posible natural numbers along it, is rolled along the clopen finite straight line, where each tangent point is a 1-to-1 correspondence between the finite modular (circle) arithmetic form and the straight arithmetic form.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Now, let us use the generalized view of the clopen concept:
Since both systems are clopen (by generalization no number is taken twice at each system), their accurate infinite cardinality is not satisfied.
Furthermore (now we are generalizing the notion of clopen by avoiding number's duplication along both circular and straight finite length forms), since a point along finite length (whether it has circular or straight form) represents one an only one number, then the clopen state holds for both circular and straight finite length forms, such that the accurate cardinality of Q or R is not satisfied.
Moreover, the order of the numbers, which are represented by points along both circular and straight finite length forms has no impact on the fact that both forms are clopen, and they are clopen because the cut is done at any given arbitrary point, which avoids number's duplication along both circular and straight finite length forms.
Since being clopen is a fact among any collection of distinct members, such collections (where their order is insignificant) do not have accurate infinite cardinality.
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