mummymonkey
Did you spill my pint?
If there are an infinte number of owls; how many owl eyes are there?
If there are an infinte number of owls; how many owl eyes are there?
That depends. How many owls can you fit on one tree?If there are an infinte number of owls; how many owl eyes are there?
an infinite number.If there are an infinte number of owls; how many owl eyes are there?
Aleph Null, I seem to remember, is the number of single numbers, Aleph One is the number of points on a line, Aleph Two is the number of possible lines
While the number of planets capable of supporting life in the universe is vast by standards of human intuition, the chance of us finding life is the product of the number of planets times the probability of life starting given such a planet.
02:03:04, 05-06-07 is not only accurate only for Americans, who inexplicably go medium-small-large in their ordering of dates, but will in fact be repeated - in 3007.
actually, 2107 is also '07 in that way of doing it as is 2207, etc. happens every one hundred years , not just every thousand and definitely not not ever again.Not purely mathematical, or at least not spatially, but I think when talking about life on other planets we need to also think about the time factor - intelligent life, as so many museums love to remind us, has existed on Earth for a heartbeat. Even granted that the odds of life on an extrasolar M-class (okay, Earth-like) planet are X, we need to remember that that is X throughout a considerable period of time, so as Clarke has said )if I remember correctly), we may meet apes or angels, but never men.
Oh, and talking of numbers, that 02:03:04, 05-06-07 is not only accurate only for Americans, who inexplicably go medium-small-large in their ordering of dates, but will in fact be repeated - in 3007. And has happened in 1007, and technically 7 (also 107 I would image) although I rather doubt anyone then noticed. And lets not get into BC either....
Given that the cantor set is isomorphic to the real numbers and of size P(Aleph null), I think the bit in bold is wrong.Aleph One, on the other hand, is the first infinite cardinal greater than Aleph Null. It can be characterized as being the cardinality of unique ways (up to order isomorphism) of well ordering a countably infinite set.
If by "isomorphic" you mean "has the same cardinality as", that's right. The following sets all have the same cardinality:Given that the cantor set is isomorphic to the real numbers and of size P(Aleph null), I think the bit in bold is wrong.
(from http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Aleph-1.html )Aleph-1 is...equal to the cardinality of the set of countable ordinal numbers.
I misread that as well the first time I looked at it. Read it again.About Aleph-One:
(from http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Aleph-1.html )
Aleph-1 is...equal to the cardinality of the set of countable ordinal numbers.
Aleph-1 is the set theory symbol for the smallest infinite set larger than aleph_0 , which in turn is equal to the cardinality of the set of countable ordinal numbers.
The well orderings of a countable set are at least of size c.Which is just a different way of saying what I said, since the set of countable ordinal numbers corresponds exactly to the unique ways of well ordering a countable set.
Yeah, I see now the "which in turn". Grammatically, it does seem to be saying that aleph null is the cardinality of the countable ordinals. If that's what the sentence is saying, it's wrong. The cardinality of the countable ordinals is aleph one. Aleph null is the cardinality of the finite ordinals, not the countable ordinals.I misread that as well the first time I looked at it. Read it again.
It looks like you're talking about all the different permutations of N. This is definitely different from talking about the set of different ways of well ordering the natural numbers.Jekyll said:Take the set of all well orderings of N.
For each element in this set, throw out all members of this well-ordering that don't begin with a 1. You'll be left with something that looks like <11, 103,19157327,1,.......>
Throw away the inital 1 to get <1, 03,9157327,,.......>.
Now glue all these digits together preceded by a '0.' .
In the example I used you'd get 0.1 03 9157327 ....
This mapping from the set of well orderings to [0,1) is obviously onto, as given a [latex] n \in [0,1) [/latex] it is trivial to generate a well ordering which would be mapped onto it. Hence (the number of well orderings on N) is >=c.
Proof of equality is left as an exercise to the reader.
If there are an infinte number of owls; how many owl eyes are there?