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[personal profile] gusl
I only believe in mathematical objects with finite information (i.e. with a finite expression). Things can expressed in any way you wish, intensionally, extensionally, whatever. So, while the natural numbers exist, not all subsets of it do.

While the set of real numbers exists (R can be expressed as the power set of N), not all of the traditional real numbers exist (only the computable ones do). So, in my definition, the cardinality of R is aleph_0 (i.e. the same as N). In fact, no set can have greater cardinality, for that would imply it had non-existing elements (since only computable things exist).

Can we design a set theory this way? How much of traditional set theory can be translated? Does we lose any good mathematics this way?

Whereas people seem to view uncomputability as a fundamental property of a problem, I tend to view it as another form of self-reference paradoxes. All "well-defined" problems are computable. Again, this is not a theorem or mathematical insight, but a re-definition, just like my "R only has countably many existing numbers" is a definition. But the point isn't just to change names and keep everything the same... it's to change the intuition that goes with the names.

Constructivism

Date: 2005-02-06 10:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] r6.livejournal.com

I’m not sure constructivism is needed for his point of view. Perhaps [livejournal.com profile] gustavolacerda is just saying that L=V. Would that be sufficient?

Re: Constructivism

Date: 2005-02-06 03:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gustavolacerda.livejournal.com
what are L and V?

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