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by btilly
3358 days ago
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The proof of the reals being uncountable depends on the idea that one can build a number that depends on being able to make an infinite number of choices, each of which depends on the absolute truth or falseness of a statement. But what happens if we open it up to have statements be true, false, or currently unknown? That is we develop a system of mathematics that could be in principle done inside of a Turing machine? Then Cantor's diagonalization argument falls apart because of all of those "currently unknown" options. See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13843725 for a previous explanation that I gave of this. |
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A constructivist would probably state the result more positive (and stronger, constructively): To every countable set M of real numbers, there is a real number not contained in M.