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13:01
How to describe the observation that: For a magma with 3 elements, letting S={a,b,c}. Multiplied a on the left on S gives aS={aa,ab,ac} which corresponds to the row a of the cayley table. Then if a is an identity, and K is some row in the cayley table, aK=K for all K. What is a doing here?
a when multiplied on K seemed to map entire rows of the cayley table to another row
$a$ is not doing anything there (that is what being an identity means)
similarly if a is a left absorber, then aK={a,a,a} for all K, so a is mapping any rows of the cayley table to a row of a s
so it seems whatever I am doing here is similar to semigroup actions, but I am not sure if they are indeed semigroup actions
I have no idea what you are trying to do.
That is, if I had a set X whose elements are the rows of the cayley table, then multiplication by any element in the magma seemed to map X to X if the magma is associative. Therefore multiplication on the left or right on any member of X seemed to be an endomorphisim of X (as endomorphism is defined to be a map from an object to itself, if I recall)?
@Secret An endomorphism is a map from an object to itself which preserves whatever structure you have on the object
13:18
I wonder...?
Let X be the set of all rows of the cayley table of the magma $(M,\circ)$, with $\circ : M \times M \rightarrow M$ the binary operator. Define a binary operator $\cdot : M \times X \rightarrow X$. Therefore, multiplication on the left maps rows to rows hence $X$ is closed under $\cdot$.
Therefore $\cdot$ should preserve the structure of $X$?
what structure?
I am not sure... Each element in $X$ has elements $y$ which are in $M$. Therefore the closure of the magma $(M,\circ)$ will be preserved by the action $\cdot$?
Actually using set notation, how do we write a set that consists of rows of a cayley table given a magma M?
That depends on whether you consider the rows ordered or not
Even though the columns and rows of the cayley table is unordered by convention, I think in order for my above mapping formalism of rows to rows to work properly, the rows and columns has to be considered to be ordered. (this is specified by how the cayley table is drawn, and the ordering will not be changed by any operations after it is specified)

Otherwise for example, if S={a,b,c} is unordered and a is a left identity, then multiplied a on the left of S should give aS={a,b,c}, but if S is unordered, then one can equally say aS={b,c,a} or {c,b,a} or any permutation of the elements in S
13:31
And why would that be an issue?
Thinking normally: if a is a left identity, then $ax=x$ for all x in $M$. That means we expect $a$ maps to $a$ by $a$, $b$ maps to $b$ by $a$ and so on. If the rows are unordered, than means $aS=\{b,c,a\}$ is a valid result (since unordered rows, which are unordered set of elements of $M$ all equivalent barring the positioning/permutation of the elements in the set/row.)

But if that's the case, then if $b$ permutes elements in a row (which is what happens in $\mathbb{Z}/n$ then $bS=aS$ since all rows are equivalent barring permutation.
If I have to show well-definedness for a sequence, I only have to look if 0 lands in some denominator or? Or are there other things to consider?
thus for unordered rows, the result of a and b cannot be distinguished, and we could as well say that b is a left identity while actually it is not
Exercise: prove that $\not\exists n \in \Bbb N: s(n)=n$ using just the Peano axioms
Exercise 2: Prove the same results using the von Neumann definition of $\Bbb N$ instead.
@Null You might be interested
@DHMO what is $s$?
13:40
@TobiasKildetoft Therefore, let's say using $\mathbb{Z}/3$ as an illustration, if we want to distinguish the multiplicative action of $1$ or $2$ done on the set $S=\{0,1,2\}$, the rows must be ordered else $1S=2S$
Is there jobs in mathematics ?
@Null the successor function
@DHMO so s(2)=3?
@Null yes
@Secret Sure
@Rakso Yes
13:42
@TobiasKildetoft Reason for asking is that im thinking hard about switching my major from computer science to math
There are jobs in computer science too.
@Rakso Probably even more jobs in CS though if that is the main concern
Sure but i've found a bigger interest for math than CS, thats why i want to switch
@AntonioVargas @TobiasKildetoft Would someone with a masters in pure Math have problems with jobs later on or how does it work?
@Rakso Switch! I switched from CS to maths. Best thing I've done. I wouldn't worry about jobs. If you're good student, you'll find 'em.
@Null do we have the same axioms?
13:45
@Rakso It is my understanding that those are fairly easy to come by, but I don't have much direct experience with it, as I have stayed in academia
@DHMO wikipedia or proofwiki? otherwise just link :D
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Thats something i've wanted to hear for quite some time. Thanks. What kinds of jobs exist for peoples with math degrees?
@Rakso, I've also stayed in academia but my impression is that it's harder to get a job with a pure math masters than with a more "applied" math masters like mathematical finance or statistics.
or actuarial science
@Null the first two axioms are existences of successor function and zero, respectively
13:47
@TobiasKildetoft @AntonioVargas What made you guys stay in academia? Also how hard would it to later with a degree in math get into something like finance?
@Rakso, fear of real world responsibilities. (joke)
@Rakso I stayed in academia because I like doing research, and nobody outside wants to pay me for it
Or at least they would probably want me to start doing some more useful research
finance hires lots of people out of academia that are morally bankrupt enough to work in finance
How is a life in academia then? Do you even get paid for research? At my Uni researchers doesn't get paid and have to educate students for cash
@Rakso At most research universities, the researchers do get paid
Not that the job does not involve teaching, but it is mainly research
13:51
good morning
programming is what brought me to CS but the main part i always liked within programming was problem solving and i feel i get to work more with problem solving in maths than in CS
I'm failing really hard at this: let $\alpha\in\mathbb{C}$ prove that $f(z)=z^\alpha$ is holomorphic
i can change my name in just 6 hours! :)
@Sophie That's because it's false unless $\alpha$ is a nonnegative integer.
The choice of switching is hard because all my friends and family says its a bad idea mainly becayse of limited jobs
13:53
It also doesn't even make sense unless $\alpha$ is an integer
@Sophie $\alpha = -1$...?
@MikeMiller why?
you have an isolated singularity at $0$ for non-negative integers
I thought $f: \Bbb C \to \Bbb C$
@DHMO, it's multivalued unless you choose a branch.
13:54
I see
@DHMO Tell me how you would define it.
@MikeMiller never mind
Attempt at formulate the mapping thingy again:
Given a magma $(M,\circ)$ with $n$ elements. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be an unordered set consists of ordered sets $K$ of size $n$ and an ordered set $S$ also of size $n$. Let $a,b \in M$. Define $\cdot : M\times \mathcal{F} \rightarrow \mathcal{F}$. Therefore $\cdot$ maps any $K\in \mathcal{F}$ to any $L\in \mathcal{F}$ as follows: $a\cdot S=K$ and $a\cdot K = L$ for all $a,b \in M$ and $S=\{a_1,a_2,\dots,a_n\}$, the set of all elements in $M$ before any operation $\circ$ is done.
@AntonioVargas Let them think about it instead of telling them why it's wrong :)
@MikeMiller you're right
13:55
@DHMO what again stops me from defining s(0)=1,s(1)=3,s(2)=2?
That's my preferred brand of pedagogy: only be so helpful as to get someone to answer their own question.
@Null that's my question, and you're not tricking me into giving the answer directly ;)
Sorry there's a typo:
@DHMO so your question is: why would the above definition of s hurt the axioms?
@Null yes
13:58
@Null You've been given the excellent hint that it's true. So it's time to just take a look at the axioms and try to work out how to apply them.
@DHMO well, P5 is a candidate imo
@Null yes it is
Attempt at formulate the mapping thingy again:
Given a magma $(M,\circ)$ with $n$ elements. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be an unordered set consists of ordered sets $K$ of size $n$ and an ordered set $S$ also of size $n$. In addition $K,L \subset M$. Let $a,b \in M$. Define $\cdot : M\times \mathcal{F} \rightarrow \mathcal{F}$. Therefore $\cdot$ maps any $K\in \mathcal{F}$ to any $L\in \mathcal{F}$ as follows: $a\cdot S=K$ and $a\cdot K = L$ for all $a,b \in M$ and $S=\{a_1,a_2,\dots,a_n\}$, the set of all elements in $M$ before any operation $\circ$ is done.
@AntonioVargas everywhere? That must be why I can't prove it
Is there any proof that the solution to $x^{x^x} = 2$ is irrational?
14:00
@Sophie, well, see @MikeMiller 's comment
@DHMO do you mean $x^{x^{x}}$ or the powertower?
@Sophie You need to start by asking "What does $z^\alpha$ mean?"
@Null I do mean $x^{\left(x^x\right)}$
@MikeMiller for $x,y\in\mathbb{C}$, $x^y=e^{y\ln(x)}$ where the exponential function is defined by the power series and the logarithm is defined as its inverse(which is multivalued)
@Rakso Same here. But if you really love maths, it wont be an issue. I'm still in grad school so I don't know squat really, but if I'd be worrying about jobs, I probably wouldn't be able to focus hard enough on the maths.
14:02
You've got the terms in the exponential backwards, $y \ln(x)$.
@Sophie OK. So we have the problem that $\ln$ is not well-defined, right? How do you get around that?
so you have to chose one of the branches of the log, but it doesn't matter which so you can just choose the main one
It does matter which! You'll get a different answer depending on which one you choose.
More illustrative example:
Suppose I have the group $(\mathbb{Z}/3,\circ)$ Let $\mathcal{F}$ be an unordered set consists of the following ordered sets: $\{0,1,2\},{1,2,0},\{2,0,1\}$. Therefore $S=\{0,1,2\}$. Define $\cdot : \mathbb{Z/3}\times \mathcal{F} \rightarrow \mathcal{F}$ as follows: Given $K\in \mathcal{F}$ and $a\in \mathbb{Z/3}$, $a\cdot K \in \mathcal{F}$. For example $2\cdot S=\{2,0,1\}$.
But sure, feel free to choose the main one. Then the point is that $z^\alpha$ is only well-defined where the branch of $\ln$ is well-defined (for the usual branch, whenever $x$ is not a nonpositive real).
@MikeMiller well yes, $x^y$ will evaluate to something else but then you can think of $x^y$ as a set instead of a number
14:04
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Whats grad school? Like for bachelor degree?
@Sophie What could it possibly mean for a set-valued function to be holomorphic? :P
@Rakso Master and PhD. I'm still at my master, so there's still many years of fun left :) And beyond PhD it's hopefully even more fun.
@MikeMiller functions are just sets of ordered pairs, ordered pairs are just sets of sets, it's basically sets all the way down. I might as well add another layer
Therefore what exactly is $\cdot$ doing, is it some kind of group action?
@Sophie err, you go ahead and do that and then let me know when you can say what a holomorphic set-valued function is.
14:07
@MikeMiller would there exist such a thing as analytic set-valued functions?
I can imagine a definition. It's not interesting and reduces to thinking about branch cuts.
@Secret are you interested?
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi that is a truly badass name
I thought the idea of complex exponentials had a canonical definition
@meow-mix 有一点点。Hehe.
14:10
@DHMO Well I used that to elucidate the associative laws and to check them as I build the structure. Tobias clarified that mapping is not an endomorphism. In trying to describe the idea hoping to find out what mathematical term for such mapping (if any), we concluded that the rows and columns of the cayley table must be ordered
@Sophie Sure. But logarithms don't.
well now we have 2 tobias'
@Secret I mean, my two exercises
$\ln(x)=\{y\in\mathbb{C}:e^y=x\}$ move fast and define things
3
Suppose the solution to $x^{x^x}=2$ is rational, that is $x-\frac{a}{b}$ for some $a,b\in \mathbb{Z}$. Then ${\frac{a}{b}}^{\frac{a}{b}^{\frac{a}{b}}}=2$. Taking ln both sides gives
14:13
"most fast and define things" is my new motto
@Sophie Again, you're going to have trouble defining the notion of a set-valued analytic function.
No matter how fast you move.
What you can successfully do is prove that after choosing a branch of $\ln$, $z^{\alpha} = e^{\alpha \ln(z)}$ is analytic.
$\frac{a}{b}\ln(\frac{a}{b}^{\frac{a}{b}})=\ln 2$. Now
@MikeMiller I'm taking these as challenges
That's fine, I just won't bother engaging you with it.
@Secret (a^b)^c $\ne$ a^(b^c)
14:16
wait so $(a^a)^a\neq a^{(a^a)}$?
ya
41 mins ago, by DHMO
Exercise: prove that $\not\exists n \in \Bbb N: s(n)=n$ using just the Peano axioms
40 mins ago, by DHMO
Exercise 2: Prove the same results using the von Neumann definition of $\Bbb N$ instead.
@Secret ^ are you interested?
@DHMO It's almost certainly true that your $x$ is transcendental. It's almost certainly false that any professional mathematician knows how to prove that.
@MikeMiller but if you see here:
30
A: Not especially famous, long-open problems which anyone can understand

Oksana GimmelLet ${^n a}$ denote tetration: ${^0 a}=1, {^{n+1} a}=a^{({^n a})}$. It is unknown if ${^5 e}$ is an integer. It is unknown if there is a non-integer rational $q$ and a positive integer $n$ such that ${^n q}$ is an integer. It is unknown if the positive root of the equation ${^4 x}=2$ is ratio...

It starts with $n > 3$
implying that the case for $n = 3$ is known
Ah, good call. It follows from Gelfond-Schneider, the only real 'big tool' in transcendental number theory. The point is that if $a$ is rational, then $a^a$ is always irrational but still algebraic. That it's irrational follows because if $a = p/q$ in lowest terms, $q$ cannot be a $q$th power unless $q=1$.
and then?
14:25
Immediate application of GS. If $a$ is rational, $a^a$ is irrational but algebraic, so $a^{a^a}$ is transcendental.
(I'm assuming of course that $a$ is not an integer.)
thanks
Let $n=0$. Then $S(0)=0$, which is false as there is no succesor of 0 in the natural numbers. By the axiom of induction (or by repeatly applying $S()$), this means there exists no S(n) for all $n\in \mathbb{N}$ which contradict to the existence of S(n) for all $n\neq 0$.
actually... what is $S(\emptyset)$...?
@Secret $S(\emptyset)$ = $\emptyset$
in that case. the proof is ok
we are being very dangerous here
14:29
The empty set is not a natural number!
since in von Neumann, the empty set is 0
@Secret Repatedly applying $S$ is not something you can do in Peano arithmetic. For one, there are nonstandard models where not every number is a successor of 0.
@DHMO Then in that model $S(\varnothing) = 1$.
No, it doesn't. How do you intend to define "the set of all numbers which are successors of 0" in the language of Peano arithmetic alone?
@MikeMiller $\left({0 \in A \land \left({\forall z \in A: s \left({z}\right) \in A}\right)}\right)$
just as in P5
@MikeMiller could you construct such a model?
14:32
That says nothing about whether or not $z$ is of the form $S(S(S(\dots(S(0)\dots)$.
@MikeMiller In that case, it is unclear how can we reach n since S is only injective, with 0 not an image and obey induction
Me? Nah. But it's been done many times. Any such model is necessarily pretty gross.
@Secret just use induction without applying S many times
and if you make your proof more formal, you would find a hole somewhere
IIRC in any such model addition is uncomputable.
and you would need to invoke another axiom
so please make your proof more formal
14:33
If you know a little logic, the existence of such a thing follows from the compactness theorem.
@MikeMiller in such a model, does there exist another non-successor element?
beware, atomic bomb incoming: proofwiki.org/wiki/…
@Null hey, I asked you to prove it as an exercise, not find answers online
@DHMO No. That 0 is the only element without a successor follows from the induction axiom.
<- doesnt understand this
@DHMO i don't understand how one can say anything about $s$ by the axioms
14:34
Consider the set $\{z \mid z = 0 \vee \exists n : s(n) = z\}$.
@Null well every axiom is about $s$
only that $s(n)$ is certainly >0
@Null order is an atomic bomb
It's patently obvious that this satisfies the assumption in the induction axiom.
in fact I'm writing a proof about why order is a trichotomy on proofwiki
14:35
@DHMO ah, see, then my approach is in general false
@Rakso So you're swedish? Byt till matte nu!
@Null just use induction
@DHMO how can we if ordering is nonexistant?
Induction is more or less all you can use to prove anything. So feel free to use it.
14:39
@DHMO do you understand it?
Business idea: a scarf you can tie like a tie.
But, like, not made out of tie, made out of scarf.
would not purchase
@Null I would write a better proof
@DHMO I find the formulation of p5 confusing, but that doesn't say much :P
@Null just treat P5 as induction
just use induction
14:41
I wonder if there's any sort of space where points divide the space into three sections instead of two
all points?
like a sort of quadrachoomy rather than a trichotomy
@DHMO so, basecase would be n=0, s(n)=0 by axiom p4
@AkivaWeinberger could you give an example of a "trichotomy"?
A space where removing any point leaves you with 3 connected components?
14:42
like a sort of quadrachotomy rather than a trichotomy
@Null yes
@Null You can always define sets by whether or not they satisfy certain properties. So it's equivalent to say "if $0$ satisfies property, and every successor satisfies property, then everything satisfies property"
@Alessandro A topological space where every point is a 3-vertex?
That's an interesting question. We have a resident point set topologist but I forget what name he uses right now.
That's an interesting question
14:46
My mild suspicion is the answer is no if the space is Hausdorff... but I'm really not the person to ask about something like that.
I am confirmed by many to knew basically nothing about topology in 2016
I do not understand that sentence.
many=sufficient topology maths chat users, as most discussion end up me almost completely confused and decided to go back to book again later
@Secret i am confirmed to know basicly nothing about math.
^and about english language :D
Such a space would necessarily be $T_1$ though if I'm not mistaken
14:51
Topology is big and hard.
How?
@DHMO so my quest is showing $s(n+1)\not=n+1$ basically?
If you have a finite number of connected components they're clopen so you can write the complement of every point as an union of open sets so the singletons are closed
@DHMO and the set $\mathbb{N}$ is only defined by peano, so we have no knowledge?
Hm, wait, nevermind, that doesn't work
@Null What do you mean when you say that $\mathbb{N}$ is defined by peano? Do you mean by Peano Arithmetics? Because that's definately not the case - there are many non-standard models of PA
14:58
Hi
@Null your quest is to show $s(n)\ne n \implies s(s(n)) \ne s(n)$
Ah, well, a $4$ elements set with the discrete topology works though
@Alessandro I demand connected
>:(
Fair enough
@Null and it is a direct result of one of the axioms
15:00
@Einer He means to say that all we know about it is the axioms
@MikeMiller every point in a discrete topology is connected
@DHMO enough tips, i come back later :)
Gotta run for a physics lecture :/ I'll think about that question later though, it seems interesting
@DHMO ...
@MikeMiller i'm just kidding
In mathematical logic, a non-standard model of arithmetic is a model of (first-order) Peano arithmetic that contains non-standard numbers. The term standard model of arithmetic refers to the standard natural numbers 0, 1, 2, …. The elements of any model of Peano arithmetic are linearly ordered and possess an initial segment isomorphic to the standard natural numbers. A non-standard model is one that has additional elements outside this initial segment. The construction of such models is due to Thoralf Skolem (1934). == Existence == There are several methods that can be used to prove the existence...
@MikeMiller Please see the section "From the compactness theorem"
is $x$ a successor of any number?
15:02
Yes.
which?
the one before it!
fair enough
Like I said, it's just a straightforward application of induction. I claim that every number is either 0 or a successor. As proof: consider the set of numbers that are either zero or a successor. Then zero is in this set, and every successor is in this set. So it's everything.
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Yea im swedish! Vet inte om det är rätt val, måste tänka igenom det mer antar jag.
15:05
@Rakso Understood.
@MikeMiller Refer to $0 \in A \and n \in A \implies s(n) \in A$
if $x$ is not a successor of $0$
how do you know it is in $A$?
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Were you the guy emailing me? :)
What? The only set in sight is $A$.
@Rakso Indeed so. So the other people wont be bothered by all the Swedish.
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Ah, i've replied to your e-mail. We can talk there no problems. Were cunfused by your last name there and on your email account.
15:07
@Rakso Good.
@MikeMiller I mean, we construct a set $A \subseteq P*$
where $0 \in A \and n \in A \implies s(n) \in A$
can you prove that $x \in A$?
@DHMO \wedge $\wedge$
oh thanks
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Nice to make some Swedish mathematician contacts :)
@Rakso Doing my best to fill the gap :)
15:12
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi Do you study here in Sweden?
Gud kommer det
@DHMO assume: s(s(n))=s(n). Then by p3, s(n)=n. right direction?
@Null yes
@Rakso I do indeed. KTH/SU combo.
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi do you speak Mandarin?
15:14
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi KTH must be much better than were im currently at, Linnéuniversitetet
@DHMO are we allowed to make a second assumtion in the step to lead it to a contradiction?
@Null which assumption?
@DHMO my first assumtion, for my induction is: $s(n)\not=n$
@DMHO 会说,但是很久没有说。
since that is the case for n=0
15:16
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi 为什么?
I don't know if inequalities are even helpful here
@Null what is your second assumption?
@DHMO In the step, i assume (to contradict it): s(s(n))=s(n)
and then?
then i get by p3, s(n)=n
15:17
therefore?
which obv contradicts my first assumtion
@DHMO 因为我住在瑞典。我住在中国的时候很有跟中国人说话的机会。
@Null Yes, it's called proof by contradiction
but to me this looks not right :/
@DHMO 这里没有那么多。
15:19
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi 你学了中文多久?
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi What was the reason you first choose CS if you liked math much more?
@DHMO Sorry, let me rephrase. Consider the set of 0 and all successors. Then 0 is in this set, and if n is a successor, so is S(n). (Indeed, we don't even need to assume that n is a successor!)
@DHMO 差不多三年。两年很努力地。
@Rakso Like so many other people in this oblong country -- maths anxiety.
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi 三年就能看那么多字 :o
@DHMO I don't understand why I can do this. I never did that in an induction proof before. So it could be just that I'm unfamiliar with it. Proof by contradiction I use normally somewhere else.
15:22
@TobiasShuxueLaoshi So you started out with it because u weren't that good at maths? Because thats basically my reason for thinking about it
@Null ok
@Rakso I thought I wasn't good at maths. Turns out I was.
@MikeMiller well, could you consider my set?
$0 \in A \land (n \in A \implies s(n) \in A)$
@DHMO 不是很多。
@Null @DHMO Also \land ("logic and")
15:23
$\land$
(it works)
Compare \lor $\lor$ and \lnot $\lnot$
Gotta go back to my commutative algebra.
@AkivaWeinberger that actually makes sense :)
The alternative for \lor is \vee $\vee$
So wedge=land and vee=lor
$\neg$, \neg
15:25
Cool, didn't know that one
didn't knew yours, yours are better for beginners I assume!
A cool thing also is that \in $\in$ backwards is \ni $\ni$
4
$\not\ni$
@DHMO so a proof that proves that $s(n)\not=n$ for all $n\in\mathbb{N}$ really proves that this holds for any peano-set or?
15:29
@Null yes
Also \ne and \neq are shortcuts for \not=
$\ne$ $\neq$ $\not=$
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML">
<mo>&#x2260;<!-- ≠ --></mo>
</math>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML">
<mo>&#x2260;<!-- ≠ --></mo>
</math>
<math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML">
<mo>&#x2260;</mo>
</math>
@DHMO I'm about to fly and I don't really much see the point. I gave a proof.
@AkivaWeinberger wow they're really the same
$\not\geq$
15:31
10 mins ago, by Mike Miller
@DHMO Sorry, let me rephrase. Consider the set of 0 and all successors. Then 0 is in this set, and if n is a successor, so is S(n). (Indeed, we don't even need to assume that n is a successor!)
@MikeMiller I mean, we have $P^*$ right
does $P$ satisfy that?
@DHMO I wish I had been taught physics this way. More method and less computation. At school we basically learned to replicate the examples we were shown
@Sophie I agree
Hi, I was wondering if anyone here has read "The Art of Computer Programming" by Knuth. How long will the entire work take to read?
Depends. You can blitzkrieg the whole thing, but I recommend going slowly and reading and re-reading it at your own pace and doing all the exercises
I answered this question, is all ball necessary to pick from the bag? The similar post does not say.

http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2055508/a-bag-contains-9-balls-3-of-which-are-blue
15:37
@DHMO I don't understand your question. I encourage you to figure it out.
@MikeMiller are we assuming that apart from 0,1,2,... we have x?
I cannot parse that sentence.
In every model of Peano arithmetic, the only non-successor is 0.
In mathematical logic, a non-standard model of arithmetic is a model of (first-order) Peano arithmetic that contains non-standard numbers. The term standard model of arithmetic refers to the standard natural numbers 0, 1, 2, …. The elements of any model of Peano arithmetic are linearly ordered and possess an initial segment isomorphic to the standard natural numbers. A non-standard model is one that has additional elements outside this initial segment. The construction of such models is due to Thoralf Skolem (1934). == Existence == There are several methods that can be used to prove the existence...
Please look at this
Sigh. I know what's in the article.
sorry
to me, it is saying that apart from 0,1,2,... we define x
15:42
@DHMO In a nonstandard model of arithmetic, there is always a number greater than any standard natural, yes.
and does the set of the "standard naturals" satisfy the five Peano's axioms?
I have no idea what that sentence means.
P5 means the fifth Peano axiom
15:44
Please stop linking me to that page. I know the axioms.
"x is out of concern" is the problem phrase. What does that mean?
You don't just add one x, when you do you add a lot more stuff to respect the axioms
P5 states that P* is equal to the set of the standard naturals
No it does not state that.
Is the standard naturals a set $A$ such that $0 \in A$ and $n \in A \implies s(n) \in A$?
Yes. There are other such sets equipped with a successor operation and element 0 satisfying the axioms.
15:46
hey guys
@MikeMiller I'm talking about the "standard naturals" inside our extended peano structure
@DHMO How do you write down the standard naturals as a subset using the language of Peano arithmetic?
@MikeMiller no idea
You can't
Yes, that's the problem.
15:50
Can anybody suggest me a good book on Commutative algebra ?
Matsumura. Eisenbud-Harris. Atiyah-MacDonald.
ok thanks @MikeMiller
Are there suggestions on how to denote the maps $H_*(X;R) \to H_*(X;S)$ and $H^*(X;R) \to H^*(X;S)$ induced by a coefficient homomorphism $\varphi \colon R \to S$ for a space $X$? I would go by $\varphi_\#$ and $\varphi^{\#}$, but they are both covariant...
16:09
so welldefinedness is simply another word for properly defined?
In any model of arithmetic, if $x$ is a (nonzero) number, so are $x+1$, $x-1$, $2x$, $\lfloor x/2\rfloor$, $\lfloor x\sqrt2\rfloor$ (exercise), etc.
This is true even for nonstandard models of arithmetic
@AkivaWeinberger the problem is you've invoked the reals by using $\sqrt{2}$
which model of arithmetic are we talking about?
Thus, the amount of nonstandard numbers in the model must be infinite or zero
@DHMO That's why it's not immediately obvious. There is a way to do it without invoking the reals. Peano Arithmetic
@AkivaWeinberger $\sqrt{2}$ itself is in the reals
it isn't defined in Peano Arithmetic per se
16:21
I know this
Essentially, the idea is that one can prove that $\forall x\exists y:y^2\le2x^2\land (y+1)^2>2x^2$ (once you've defined $\le$ and $>$), and that that $y$ is unique
@AkivaWeinberger this formulation is better
That $y$ is defined to be $\lfloor x\sqrt2\rfloor$.
And it exists even if $x$ is nonstandard, in a nonstandard model.
@AkivaWeinberger than this formulation
I see
hi
@AkivaWeinberger Well I would like to supplement that our addition and multiplication and ordering are all based on the Peano arithmetic so there's really nothing special about non-standard Peano arithmetics
$a \le b \iff \exists n: a + n = b$
16:24
Maybe I should just mentally attack my readers by writing $C_*(X;\varphi)$ for the map $C_*(X;R) \to C_*(X;S)$ induced by $\varphi \colon R \to S$.
@MikeMiller IIRC Forever Mozart found a metric example.
But I don't know either.
I have a contruction that should work for that problem but haven't had time to think about it properly
I think I had one when Forever first told me but I can't remember anymore :(
But I'm thinking about something with a dense partial order that "forks" at every point when going up
16:42
hi @Semiclassical
Hello quick question here
Is a linear combination a special type of convolution?
@arctictern huh!
16:58
I don't see any connection between the two. (Besides the fact that with finite settings, convolutions involve linear combinations).
You might as well ask if a banana is a special type of vehicle.
@arctictern "convolutions involve linear combinations" absolutely.
so I was wondering whether one can consider calculating a linear combination the same as calculating a (special case) comvolution.
how so?
Actually it seems you already answered my question. Convolution uses linear equations.

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