agentredlum said:
Thank you very much for your reply. Please consider the following
Quote:every number has a "distinct property" different from every other number-that of being itself.
I am in complete agreement with you on this point. Each real number has one property that completely characterizes that number as being unique among all the other reals: namely, the property of being itself.
I absolutely agree with you. [itex]\forall x \in \mathbb{R}, x = x[/itex]. I believe that!
The problem is that we don't have
names for all of them. Forgive me here for trying to stretch an analogy. You own dog boarding facility. You run the place based on the tag number of each dog. You know what cage they're in, what time they need to be fed, any special health or medical issues, any special instructions from the owner, etc. It's all keyed off the tags.
As it happens, you have exactly 100 tags, and your tag maker is on vacation. So you can't get any more tags. And one day you get a lot of business and you have 200 dogs.
You can keep track of 100 of them. But you have no way to say that #150 is different than dog #151, because you just have no idea. You have no names for them so even though you know they're there, because you can see them with your own eyes; nevertheless, it is still a meaningless question to say, "How many collies do I have?" or "Fido gets a vegan dinner." Since you can't
name them, you can't deal with them at all.
That's the problem with the real numbers. We can prove there are uncountably many of them. But we only have
names for countably many of them. If x and y are two distinct members of this set of
undefinable numbers, then the only things we can say about them follow from the axioms for the reals.
We can say that either x < y or y < x (we already said they're distinct.). We can say that if we multiply x times y, then we multiply y times x, we will get the same answer.
Anything that's true about the reals, we can say about x and y. But we can't say anything else about them. Because we have no names for them.
What do you think about that?