Carla, can a person can't take things personally ?
By your question you give the answer.
The eye does not see itself until it is aware to its limitations, and than it can be included as an explored element.
Now please change "eye" by "personality" and read the above again.
For example, let us explore our abilities to create the Math language.
The above point of view leaded me to ask myself what are the minimal conditions that gives us the ability to identify and count things?
For example, let's examine this situation:
On the table there is finite unknown quantity of identical beads
and we have:
A) To find their sum.
B) To be able to identify each bead.
Limitation:
we are not allowed to use our memory.
By trying to find the total quantity of the beads (represent the discreteness concept) without using our memory (represents the continuum concept) we find ourselves stuck in 1, so we need an association between continuum and discreteness if we want to be able to find the bead's sum.
Let's cancel our limitation, so now we know bead's sum which is, for example, value 3.
Now we try to identify each bead, but they are identical, so we identify each of them by its place on the table.
But this is an unstable solution, because if someone takes the beads, put them between his hands, then shake them and put them back on the table, then we lost their id.
Each identical bead can be the bead that was identified by us before it was mixed with the other beads.
We shall represent this situation by:
((a XOR b XOR c),(a XOR b XOR c),(a XOR b XOR c))
By notate a bead as 'c' we get:
((a XOR b),(a XOR b),c)
and by notate a bead as 'b' we get:
(a,b,c)
We satisfy condition B but
(and this is the important thing) through this process we define a universe, which exists between continuum and discreteness concepts, and can be systematically explored and be used to make Math.
More detailed information of my new theory of numbers, you can find here:
http://www.geocities.com/complementarytheory/CATpage.html
Yours,
Doron