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by js6i
1760 days ago
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> When we make statements such as the size of the set of all natural numbers 1, 2, 3... is the same as the size of the set of all natural even numbers 2, 4, 6..., despite the former containing the latter but not vice-versa... it seems the word "size" -- and associated terminology "larger than", "smaller than", etc. -- is a particularly unhelpful set of words to have chosen for this. It seems to me, when you're counting things, you wouldn't care what are the things you're counting specifically; while in your example it does matter for determining the subset relation. Whatever way of counting where it matters would be kind of weird. > it seems like an unwarranted leap to go from this formal comparison of cardinality of infinite sets, to the intuitive English-sentence idea that "almost all" real numbers are irrational But the article uses "almost all" in the formal sense? Which, by the way, also has pretty intuitive meaning, in my opinion. |
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By formal sense, do you mean everywhere but a finite-measure set? Zero-measure?
I'll use finite-measure because it allows for intuitive constructions like "almost all real numbers are outside the closed unit interval 0 <= x <= 1".
But, there are still some constructions that a layperson might expect to hold, like: "almost all real numbers have fractional part < 1e-100", or "almost all positive numbers are of the form x.y with 0.y < 1/x" (thanks, harmonic series).
I think that without formal training, we're especially bad at reasoning about dense sets such as the set of rational numbers, compared to, say, the reals.