How is the set of all natural numbers, N, denumerable?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of denumerability, specifically focusing on the set of natural numbers, N, and its role in defining countability in set theory. Participants explore the historical context, definitions, and implications of denumerability, as well as the choice of N as a reference set.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question whether N is assumed to be countable simply by establishing a one-to-one correspondence with itself.
  • Others suggest that the definition of countability is that a set can be mapped onto ℝ with a one-to-one correspondence, emphasizing the need to adopt a specific definition of countable.
  • One participant argues that definitions are not inherently magical and are established for practical communication, suggesting that countability could be defined differently in other contexts.
  • Another participant references Cantor's work, noting that he specifically addressed the natural numbers in relation to sequences and countability.
  • Some participants propose that while N is a canonical choice for defining countability, other sets like the rationals could also serve this purpose.
  • There is a suggestion that the choice of N may be due to its convenience as a simple example of an infinite set.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying opinions on the necessity and reasoning behind using N as the standard for denumerability. There is no consensus on whether other sets could serve as alternatives or why N was specifically chosen.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note that the definition of countability may depend on context and that the discussion does not resolve the underlying assumptions or the historical reasons for the choice of N.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those exploring foundational concepts in set theory, the nature of infinity, and the historical development of mathematical definitions.

JT73
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I know the history of how set theory came about and how Cantor showed the real numbers between (0,1) were non-denumerable.

He did this by showing that they can't be put into a one-one correspondence with N (1, 2, 3...)
...So what does that really tell me? I know it tells me that the infinity of the reals is larger, but how does that tell me that N is countable itself?

Did we just assume N is countable by putting a one-to-one correspondence from N to N itself?
Why say "A set is countable if it can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with N."

Why pick N for the role of determining the denumerability of other sets?
 
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I'm not big on number theory and I know others will post after me with much more knowledge but I will start it off by what makes sense to me.

The definition, as you say, is that it can be mapped onto ℝ with a one to one correspondence. If it can we call it countable. Don't mess this up with your connotation of countable which, to almost everyone, means you can count it. You have to throw out your old version of countable and replace it with this one. When then asked why is ℝ is considered countable you simply say because it has a one to one correspondence with ℝ. It's almost like an axiom, you don't really ask why a point is called a point, any answer will most likely end up referring back to itself.

In regards to why use ℝ I'm pretty sure they use it because it has the lowest cardinality of any infinite set.
 
Isn't it just the definition? In practice, when you count a bunch of things, the number of items is one of the natural numbers. It's a bit like asking why 2 has the shape it does--it's just the definition we all agree on so we can easily communicate.

Or said another way: there's nothing magical about definitions. Things are just defined the way they are because it has proven useful to define them that way. If you have an application where it makes sense to denumerate a set of items with -4 items, you can just define countable in that context to refer to the integers instead of the natural numbers.

Maybe I'm missing the point of your question, though!
 
Edit: just saw above. Oh okay, that makes sense. I wasn't sure if there was some exact reason. Yes, i understand what we mean by "countable."

I didn't get why or where N came from for being THE set that all other sets need to be able to be mapped one-to-one to be called denumerable.

Almost like an axiom makes sense I guess
 
I did a little reading. I can't find an english translation of Cantor's paper, but I found a paper on jstor (http://www.jstor.org/stable/2975129) that discusses it. Corollary 2 of his Theorem 2 from "On a Property of the Collection of All Real Algebraic Numbers" is "The real numbers cannot be written as an infinite sequence. That is, they cannot be put into a one-to-one correspondence with the natural numbers."

That suggests he was interested specifically in the natural numbers because those are often used to index a sequence of numbers.

If anyone has an english translation of Cantor's actual paper, it might provide further interesting details.
 
Yes, the Naturals are a somewhat-canonical choice, but there is no reason not

to alternatively search for a bijection with the Rationals, or a two-way injection (DADT ;) )

with the Rationals , per Ricky-Schroder-Bernstein theorem.
 
JT73 said:
I didn't get why or where N came from for being THE set that all other sets need to be able to be mapped one-to-one to be called denumerable.
The definition could use any other countable set, but I think that N (and maybe Z) is the most convenient choice.
 
well what would you pick as the world's simplest example of an infinite set?
 

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