ARE integers ordered pairs of natural numbers:

In summary, the conversation discusses the definitions and semantics of different mathematical concepts such as integers, reals, and naturals. It explores the idea of isomorphism and the use of labels to represent these concepts. There is a discussion about whether it is correct to say that the natural numbers are a subset of the rationals, as well as the role of isomorphisms in understanding these concepts. The conversation also mentions a draft by Ali Nesin that delves into these topics in more detail.
  • #1
lolgarithms
120
0
ok.
some rant about definition and semantics.

integers are isomorphic ordered pairs of natural numbers (a,b) w/ equivalence relation (a,b)=(c,d) iff a+d=b+c.

reals are convergent sequences of rationals,

etc.

in mathematics, are integers simply isomorphic to the ordered pairs of natural numbers w/ the equivalence relation? or is the set of integers equal to the set of pairs of natural numbers with the equivalence relation?

is it really correct to say that "the set of naturals is a subset of the set of reals" or "reals are a subset of complexes"?
 
Last edited:
Mathematics news on Phys.org
  • #2
lolgarithms said:
in mathematics, are integers simply isomorphic to the ordered pairs of natural numbers w/ the equivalence relation? or is the set of integers equal to the set of pairs of natural numbers with the equivalence relation?
It doesn't matter in the slightest. You can define them however you want (as long as you end up with an isomorphic structure).
 
  • #3
It's all relative - reading a good book on the set theoretic foundations of numbers and mathematics in general will help clear this up.

From the beginning

From sets to natural numbers

{} is called 0
{{}, } is called 1
{{{}, }, } is called 2, etc..

From naturals to integers
[0, 1] = [1, 2] = [2, 3] is called -1
[0, 0] = [1, 1] = ... is called 0
[2, 5] = [1, 4] = ... is called -3, etc.

From integers to rationals
(2, 1) = (4, 2) = ... is called 2
(1, 1) = (2, 2) = ... is called 1
(1, 2) = (2, 4) = ... is called 1/2

From rationals to irrationals
This is the sticky one and hinges around Cauchy sequences or Dedekind cuts.

Since -3 is just a label and means different things in different contexts, but they are all in some sense the same thing (via isomorphism).

--Elucidus
 
  • #4
and i would like to know is it really correct to say that "the natural numbers are a subset of the rationals", etc?

i don't think so, if rationals are ordered pairs of ordered pairs of naturals, and naturals are just naturals.

sorry if i sound rude, but how can you just say that 3 is a rational, and {{3,0},{1,0}} is a natural? it is just being sloppy, isn't it.

edit:Here was the dirty secret. those mathematicians/textbooks were actually talking about isomorphisms!
 
Last edited:
  • #5
lolgarithms said:
and i would like to know is it really correct to say that "the natural numbers are a subset of the rationals", etc?

i don't think so, if rationals are ordered pairs of ordered pairs of naturals, and naturals are just naturals.

sorry if i sound rude, but how can you just say that 3 is a rational, and {{3,0},{1,0}} is a natural? it is just being sloppy, isn't it.

The number 3 is

A Cauchy sequence converging to 3 AND it is
An equivalence class of the ordered pair (3, 1) (as in = 3/1) AND it is
An equivalence class of the ordered pair [3, 0] (as in 3 - 0) AND it is
{{{{}, }, }, }

So in reality it is a Cauchy sequence of ordered pairs of ordered pairs of successive inclusions of the empty set.

Complex numbers would just be ordered pairs of such.

Everthing can be boiled down to the brace notation. The label "3" is just a convenient glyph that represent this concept. Understandably the common sense of "3" predates the more contrived definition, but an axiomatic development of number requires this sort of bootstrapping from basic principles.

Check out the draft by Ali Nesin:

http://www.math.bilgi.edu.tr/courses/Lecture%20Notes/SetTheoryLectureNotes.pdf

Specifically chapters 10 through 13.

--Elucidus
 
Last edited by a moderator:

1. What are integers?

Integers are whole numbers that can be positive, negative, or zero. They do not have decimal or fractional parts.

2. What are natural numbers?

Natural numbers are positive integers that start from 1 and continue to infinity. They do not include any negative numbers or zero.

3. Are integers and whole numbers the same?

No, integers include both positive and negative whole numbers, while whole numbers only include positive numbers.

4. How are integers ordered?

Integers are ordered on a number line, with negative numbers to the left of 0 and positive numbers to the right. The further away a number is from 0, the larger its absolute value is.

5. What is the relationship between integers and natural numbers?

Integers are ordered pairs of natural numbers, where the first number represents the position of the natural number on the number line and the second number represents its direction (positive or negative).

Similar threads

Replies
17
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
13
Views
1K
Replies
38
Views
3K
Replies
12
Views
1K
Back
Top