*melinda*
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This is something that I think I should already know, but I am confused.
It really seems to me that the set of all real numbers, \Re should be compact.
However, this would require that \Re be closed and bounded, or equivalently,
that every sequence of points in \Re have a limit point in \Re.
But I don't see how \Re can be closed and bounded, unless we somehow decide that infinity is a real number.
So, are the real numbers compact?
thanks
It really seems to me that the set of all real numbers, \Re should be compact.
However, this would require that \Re be closed and bounded, or equivalently,
that every sequence of points in \Re have a limit point in \Re.
But I don't see how \Re can be closed and bounded, unless we somehow decide that infinity is a real number.
So, are the real numbers compact?
thanks
