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by wayn3
3385 days ago
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The confusion in your argument is rather simple. You construct the set of INTEGERS in a binary representation. Then you flip them over to the other side,in an operation that you yourself do not fully understand. The first number that you flip (0.1) turns into 0.5 decimal The second number that you flip (0.01) turns into 0.25 decimal The third is 0.75 0.125 and so on. You are creating a subset of the rational numbers, which is obviously countable. It is countable because you constructed it to be countable. You constructed something that was countable and then tried to prove that it is countable. Happens all the time :) |
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I did understand before how flipping changed the numbers into 0.5, 0.25, etc., but had missed that this process would only create rational, thereby missing the irrationals altogether. There's enough food for thought for me now. :-)