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00:00
assuming we ABS them first ofc
the point is to avoid ABS since it isn't differentiable
if you ABS them first, then why don't you just take the mean
note that (sqrt(|a|)+sqrt(|b|)+sqrt(|c|))^2 = |a|+|b|+|c|+2sqrt(ab)+2sqrt(bc)+2sqrt(ac)
if the former is easily computed, then |a|+|b|+|c| itself would be way nicer
the problem is the mean is too volatile
the point is to have a reasonable representation that doesn't depend much on the sign but that is differentiable
@user35945 I don't see how adding the square root of the pairwise products solve the problem
00:09
@LeakyNun so the issue is that I only have up to 5 datapoints, and one can be an enormous outlier. I thought that taking the root or the log before the sum might be a good idea to increase robustness
@user35945 no idea then
hm thanks anyways
00:41
hey, guys
No one's here, Lucas. Whom are you talking to?
Clearly untrue
Are you unsleeping again, Balarka?
Seems like it :P
Oy.
@Lucas: So ... ?
00:52
I'm talking to @Ted and @Balarka, then.
But are you saying anything?
Clearly not.
Hi @Semiclassic. You made it through the week without any more flat tires?
Only one lost lunch chiller?
Hey chat
01:02
hi @Eric
Heya Eric :)
Oy, it's Demonark.
Olá @Daminark
the potatoman cometh
01:04
And he t h o n k e t h
But yeah how's it going?
When Balarka and Potatoman are here, it's my cue to leave.
Good plan @Ted
Wanna join me for dinner, Eric?
@Daminark He protecc, he attacc, but he also... t h o n c c
Ah come on I don't shitpost nearly as much on here anymore. It's all on Discord and irl
01:06
@Ted ofc, what are you having?
I have leftover Chinese braised chicken (with star anise and Szechuan peppercorns).
Ooh sounds good
It'll be fun if you end up in CA :P
Hopefully I get into those ca schools lol
No pressure on GREs. :)
01:08
O rip I wanted to start studying for those
Ah fuck yeah I forgot about those
Since you can compute readily, Eric, I suspect you'll be just fine. But it's worth practicing a bit to save time.
I was told recently (at a dinner with a bunch of grad students and a few undergrads) that the GRE is changing slightly.
How so?
Allegedly they're making it harder.
01:11
Yeah, I also need to prepare for taking the test, historically I vary a lot on standardized tests
I'm still confident that someone who knows calc, multivariable calc, linear algebra, and basic analysis cold will do great.
I was really bad at the sat but really good at the act for some reason
Does the GRE permit taking multiple times?
That's not so unusual, Eric.
Yes, Demonark.
Just look carefully at when the advanced exam is offered.
I think grad students here are running a prep session for the subject test
01:13
I should probably take it soon then just so there's a few chances to do it well
Take advantage of that, Eric.
Definitely
I was hoping to do it sooner rather than later so I wouldn't have to think about it ever again
Same
Well, it's important, so don't treat it too lightly.
Demonark: Seriously. You need to do serious practice at computational calculus and linear algebra. Or you will die.
Yeah I'm definitely not going to blow it off, since I'm aiming at some hard schools I don't wanna slack
01:18
Yup. And nor should Demonark.
But my admonition is serious to him.
Meh, yeah I'll probably get around to that soon enough
@EricSilva Where are you in algebraic topology
have you covered infinity topos theory in your class yet
I thought that was a prerequisite
I was hoping to find someone to relearn some covering space theory with
01:28
No one knows that.
Take a space and cover it with another. Qed
Blanket it.
@Daminark RG apparently lost 52K in 2 days
Insane
Oh snap
01:36
im really curious to see what his response is going to be
there's not much to respond to at this point
It's time for me to send myself to the kitchen
Y'all misbehave without me.
See ya @Ted
I won't tell you to go ununsleep, Balarka.
Maybe I should
Far be it from me to try to influence you. I know it's pointless (and lineless).
01:39
lol well you successfully influenced me to learn calculus
I take some credit for the math directions you've headed, actually, but in terms of sleep and unsleep and ununsleep, I'm worthless.
hahaha
Night!
Top of the morning to you
01:58
Hey, is anyone around?
Hey
By any chance, do you have knowledge about integrations of volumes?
I am kinda struggling to see the integrations limit of a certain intersection of solids
I can probably try to help but calculus and geometry aren't my strong suits
Oh my god what the flicker did I just watch
Having read the title of that I will refrain from committing the same mistake
02:13
This is legit sickening
But fun fact: Cronenberg's voice makes a cameo in the short film
yeah I feel ya, I feel I solved it correctly but I dont know if the answer that I got is the correct one
(Why am I not surprised?)
the question its just asking for the volume of a sphere of radius 2 (x^2 + y^2 +z^2 <= 4) contained in a simple cone (z = Sqrt(x^2 + y^2) ) and
 
3 hours later…
04:48
Can anyone clarify my understanding of saying what it means for something not to be a spanning tree?
Spanning tree: a spanning subgraph that is tree, so if I say that something is not a spanning tree, it is still a spanning subgraph BUT is not a tree (i.e. a spanning subgraph that is either not connected or contains a cycle)?
05:18
@Mathwo
@MathWorld25 You there?
I dont really get your question, I feel like you are not understanding the definitions correctly
If you say that something is NOT a spanning subgraph then it may or may not be a spanning subgraph
The negation of that doesnt really give you any info
Okay, my question is what does it mean for something NOT to be a spanning tree
when the spanning tree is defined as a spanning subgraph that is a tree
my confusion is when I say something NOT to be a spanning tree,
is it still a spanning subgraph?
That is a really specific definition and doesnt give you any info
if I ask you, for example, that a certain number is not 0
does it give you any info?
ah I guess
05:21
It might be natural, it might bot be
you cant know
you cant get any info of that
ah okay
my trouble is simply
aaside from that is not an spanning tree
trying to prove something by contradiction
where the conclusion is to show that some graph is a spanning tree
so i'm trying to make sure i'm taking the negation of the conclusion properly
Okahy, thats different hahaha
so in this case, if I say it is not a spanning tree, it could be because it is not a spanning subgraph or it is not a tree?
05:25
let me think about it for a minute, I am trying to remember the graph teory behind to prove it
Okay thanks! I am unsure if this is the usual definition for it, I'm new to graph theory and I realized several books define some things quite differently
no the definition is right
A spanning Tree is a spanning subgraph that also happens to be a tree, that mean it has no cycles
a spanning subgraph is a subgraph that contains every vertex of the original graph
What is the original enunciate for the problem?
I feel I am lacking some info to solve it
The problem is
Let G is a connected subgraph with |V(G)| > 1.
If H is a subgraph of G such that H is maximal, then H is a spanning tree.
sorry, in addition, " H is maximal so that is has no cycles "
my idea is, if H is NOT a spanning tree means that H has a cycle, the proof would be quick, since we said H has no cycles
but I am unsure it's this simple lol
05:33
The proof would be indeed, assume tthat H is NOT an spanning tree, that means

1: It has a cycle OR
2: It has a number of connected vertex lower than G
does (2) come from saying that it may be that |V(G)| \neq |V(H)|?
oh yes
haha
okay, so I guess I have to take care of when it is the case that it is (2)
yes, case 2 is the problem
maybe it should contradict something about the maximality of H
yeah but the way this is wordedn maximal has to do with the way it forms no cycles
maximality is related to a certain property
Its worded weirdly
hmm okay
05:37
unless it means
its a maximally CONNECTED subgraph
then it means it has a maximum number of vertex
it that case, that would be your proof
I feel like the way it was worded was that
if it is a maximally connected subgraph
Then V(G) = V(H)
the subgraph would use all the vertices since G was connected to begin with right?
ah I think that's what is meant
makes more sense
to say it like that
Thank you!
05:39
yeah its missing that word, it's worded in a weird way but thats it
Its just basically a corolary of the property
06:01
[Random]
Let a map f to biject $\omega$ to 0.10000000
then $\omega 2$ to 0.01000000
$\omega 3$ to 0.001000000
thus $\omega n$ to 0.00...100000
Now if we arrange them as follows:
0.1000000...
0.0100000...
0.0010000...
0.0001000...
0.0000100...
0.0000010...
0.0000001...
Then cantor's theorem said
0.1111111...
06:25
However, on more detailed inspection we will find the problem:
Because the ordinals are well ordered by set membership, larger ordinals must contain smaller ordinals
We now proposed another way to well order them, and demonstrate that we can construct an uncountable well ordering on $\omega^2$
To begin, recall $\omega=\{n:n\in \Bbb{N}\}$
We can define a bijection $f: n \to m$ where $m\in \Bbb{N}$
Now consider $\omega 2=\omega +\omega$
We can define $f$ as follows:
$0\to 0,0'\to 1,1\to 2, 1'\to 3...$
now we can do similar bijections for all $\omega n,n\in \Bbb{N}$
this is allowed by the group $\Bbb{Z}$ having countable many cosets of the form $n\Bbb{Z}$
Now for $\omega^2 =\bigcup_{n\in \Bbb{N}}\omega n$
07:12
@Secret any countable ordinal can be embedded in $[0,1)$
@Secret you can't construct an uncountable ordering on a countable set
But why, we seemed to be able to get uncountable chains on the naturals no problem?
and they are ordered by inclusion
Because that's a subset of $P(\Bbb N)$
Also lacking AC, can $\omega^2$ be shown to be countable since countable unions of countable sets are not necessary countable?
But you can define a bijection here
Is it because of the existence of the pathway $\omega^2 = \omega \times \omega$?
07:18
sure
And this allow us to biject all ordered pairs with the naturals?
$\omega^2 := \omega \times \omega := \sup \{\omega n : n \in \omega\} := \bigcup \{\omega n: n \in \omega\}$
right @Secret
That supremum involves countable unions of countable sets, which lacking AC, cannot be shown to be countable. Unless the fact that ordinals are well ordered somehow avoided that problem
The step that uses AC is when you are injecting each one to $\Bbb N$
we avoided the problem here because there is an explicit injection
namely $f_n(\omega n + m) = m$
07:34
14
A: totally ordered chain in the powerset with big cardinality

Joel David HamkinsLet's think about the countable case like this: think of the binary tree $2^{\lt\omega}$, which has size $\omega$, but has $2^\omega$ many branches. Each branch describes a cut in the natural lexical order on the nodes, and so we have a countable linear order with $2^\omega$ many cuts. So consid...

@Secret trying to understand the first paragraph lol
The first paragraph is basically the same as taking a bunch of nested sets created by dedekind cuts on the rationals. Each cut partition the set into two subsets, thus each node has two branches, making a total of $2^{\aleph_0}$ many branches
2
Q: uncountable well-ordered chain in $(\mathcal{P}(\mathbb{N}),\subseteq)$ without $AC$

Alessandro CodenottiIf we assume $AC$ we can construct an uncountable well-ordered chain of subsets of $\mathbb{N}$ by well-ordering the reals and then using the same Dedekind's cut construction as in this question. edit: as pointed out in the comments and Asaf's answer the construction above doesn't work What if ...

And it seems that we cannot find an uncountable well ordered chain without choice
@Secret sure
but we're just finding an uncountable linearly ordered chain without choice
there's no problem with linear ordered chains because we can make $2^{\kappa}$ many cuts on a linearly ordered set of cardinality $\kappa$
and then take all the left (resp right) subsets to form the chain of cardinality $2^{\kappa}$
oh I kind of get the first paragraph now
The point is that there are only $\omega$ many nodes
yet $2^{\aleph_0}$ many branches
07:49
0
Q: Existence of predicative uncountable well ordering?

SecretRecently in chat, we investigated the explicit construction of $\omega_1$. Regardless on whether we use ZFC or hartogs number, we seemed to hit a roadblock. Using either ZFC or hartogs number, we managed to came up a set of countable ordinals $S$ that corresponds to well orderings on $\omega$. H...

The more I think about $\omega_1$ the more I doublt it can be explicitly constructed
It seems that other than it has to be contained within $\mathcal{P}^2(\Bbb{N})$, there is no other way
I wonder if it is impossible to construct uncountable sets in intuitionist logic
6
Q: Did Brouwer evade uncountability?

Frode BjørdalI have the distinct memory of having often heard and read that intuitionism was inter alia geared to avoid Cantor's uncountable sets, and it may be that this was Brouwer's plan. But are there accounts which demonstrate that early intuitionism (i.e. before the advent of modern intuitionistic set t...

Seems not
0
Q: Does intuitionist logic deny diagonal argument?

MaterialistLet us for example give an example of diagonal proof of uncountability of the set of real numbers $\mathbb{R}$. Would intuitionists accept this, or deny this? If they deny this argument, why would they?

08:09
right @Secret
08:32
hmmm....
The MSE I have found in constructing sets via intuitionist logic are uncountable, non well ordered sets
I wonder' if it is possible to construct $\omega_1$ explicitly
@Secret with C or without?
without C of course, with C the answer is trivial once the reals are constructed intuitively
@Secret the construction of the reals does not require C
yeah, but we cannot well order the reals without C
the above MSEs also said we cannot use powersets of well ordered sets to make an uncountable well ordering in the form of uncountable chains
The hartog's construction seemed to have issue with circularity as pointed out by user21820 and elaborated in my MSE on predicative uncountable well ordering
namely the circularity is that how are two computable ordinals $\alpha, \beta$ are given with the relation $\alpha < \beta$ without first showing that to be true, what guarentees it?
If $\alpha,\beta$ can be written in ordinal notations, then we can easily figure out which one injects into another, but the nature of $\omega_1^{CK}$ means we must ran out of ordinal notations before we even reach $\omega_1^{CK}$
How is $\alpha$,$\beta$ given? If $\beta$ is a successor of $\alpha$, then I can see we can show that $\alpha < \beta$ by injection. But if $\beta$ is a limit or an ordinal that is not a successor of $\alpha$, how can we show that $\alpha <\beta$ without having to assume that our given $\alpha$ injects into $\beta$? Or is the Hartogs number construction guarantee that for all $\alpha,\beta$, $\alpha < \beta$ and thus established that $S$ is a well ordering even though we cannot construct $\alpha,\beta$? — Secret 4 hours ago
I thought you just want $\omega_1$
08:39
But in order to construct $\omega_1$ from hartog's number, we need to show the set of all countable well orderings is well ordered, but we cannot seemed to do so for any two computable ordinals that has no ordinal notation without assuming it is true
You don't need hartog's number whatever it means
Without C, hartog's number is the only known way to construct $\omega_1$ and higher uncountable ordinals
hmm, maybe you're right
@AlessandroCodenotti any ideas on how to resolve this?
The usual construction of ordinals is done in $\sf ZF$ alone, I'm not sure what's the problem
08:43
@AlessandroCodenotti even of $\omega_1$?
@AlessandroCodenotti The problem is we cannot show whether any two computable ordinals $\alpha,\beta$ (that lacked ordinal notations) there's an injection of one into another without first assuming that $\alpha < \beta$ or $\beta < \alpha$, but that is precisely what is needed to be proved for all ordinals in the set of all countable well orderings
"the inability to write down computable ordinals $x,y$ between $\omega_1^{CK}$ and the large Veblen ordinal means that given arbitrary $x,y$ we cannot justify that an injection exists from one into another." I don't understand this - can you explain more clearly what the problem is here? Given two ordinals $\alpha,\beta$ we define an injection from one to the other via transfinite recursion along them - and I believe this is predicative (the crucial point being that we're given $\alpha$ and $\beta$ in this situation, we don't have to build them predicatively). — Noah Schweber 14 hours ago
in Logic, Oct 2 at 17:10, by Leaky Nun
2. in ZFC how do you construct ω1 i.e. the set of all countable ordinals?
from here [my self-answer] is how I construct $\omega_1$ using ZFC
Noah Schweber said that $\alpha, \beta$ were given, but how does doing power sets on the naturals will guarenteee we have $\alpha < \beta$ for all $\alpha,\beta$ in the set of all countable well orderings?
in Logic, Oct 2 at 17:12, by Leaky Nun
so you take N, and make NxN, and then filter out the well-orders, and then you have ω1
"and then filter out the well-orders" need C as you will be picking out infinitely many elements
@Secret I did say C
and btw it's filtering from P(NxN)
yup you did, but the question here is ZF
08:50
sure
and somehow, ZF need to establish the existence of $\alpha < \beta$
I don't see why you have computability issues
So to be precise your question is how do you construct $\omega_1$ in $\sf ZF$?
yeah, in particular how to find or establish existence of an injection between two computable ordinals that has no ordinal notations
@Secret let's deal with $\omega_1$ first lol
@LeakyNun ok, I will clarify as we go, let's put in the construction first
(The following is what I know about hartog's number in constructing $\omega_1$, fill in any gaps if I miss something)
First to begin, the Hartog's number in ZF is the smallest ordinal that does not inject into some set S, not necessary ordered
08:55
the following is what I know about hartog's number:.
We pick $S=\Bbb{N}$ and construct $\mathcal{P}(\Bbb{N})$ by the axiom of power set. This set contains some subset of the naturals
Now, the set of all countable well ordering of the naturals are all the ways that the subsets of the naturals can be well ordered, and they live inside $\mathcal{P}^2(\Bbb{N})$
In $\sf ZF$ you can define $\omega_1=\aleph(\omega)$, the hartgos number of an ordinal $\alpha$ is actually the least cardinal greater than $\alpha$
til first order axiomatization of reals cannot exclude infinitesimals
I need a small sanity check here:
> the aleph numbers are a sequence of numbers used to represent the cardinality (or size) of infinite sets that can be well-ordered
In ZF, is "a set that can be well ordered" different from "a well ordered set"?
@Secret the sets themselves are well-ordered, not the elements inside the set
09:08
So $\aleph_1$ is well ordered in that any subset of it has a minimum, and its elements are countable ordinals?
Or is $\aleph_1$ not well ordered, but its elements are the countable ordinals?
@user21820 @ Leaky
@Secret $\aleph_1$ is well-ordered in that any subset thereof has a minimum and its elements are the countable ordinals
Can anybody help me with this? In how many ways can $a$ objects be distributed into $b$ boxes $(a<b)$ such that no box may contain more than 1 object?
@MrAP are the objects distinguishable or not?
if they are distinguishable, then bPa; if they are indistinguishable, then bCa.
The objects as well as the boxes are distinguishable
then bPa.
09:17
Can you please explain how?
@MrAP do you know what bPa means?
Yes
what does it mean?
The number of permutations of a objects taken b at a time.
sorry the reverse
right
we view the boxes as the b objects
09:19
b objects taken at a time
permute them taking a at a time
and use them to contain the balls in order
or you can view it as bCa x a!, where you choose a boxes from the b boxes and permute the balls instead
[thus bPa = bCa x a!]
@ LeakyNun @ AlessandroCodenotti Actually, I am thinking, since ordinals are transitive under $\in$, if we have the set of all countable well orderings S (an element in $\mathcal{P}^2(\Bbb{N})$), then the union of them all must be an ordinal and thus it will be automatically well ordered because of transitivity, no?

If that's the case, then we can bypass showing that $\alpha < \beta$ for any $\alpha,\beta \in S$
So $S$ is basically $\omega_1$?
That's what I am suspecting, since the elements of ordinals are nested under $\in$ in some form
So if all its elements are ordinals, and there are no repeats, then their union must be a new ordinal
09:24
@LeakyNun, I reasoned like this: We have $a$ distinguishable objects and $b$ distinguishable boxes $(a<b)$ and we have to distribute $a$ objects into $b$ boxes such that no box may contain more than 1 object. Therefore we have to calculate the number of ways in which we can fill up $b$ places when we have $a$ objects at our disposal and this is equal to $aPb$. But $a<b$ so this is not valid. What is wrong with this reasoning?
So even if we end up with something like e.g. $\{\omega,\omega^{\omega},\omega 2,...\}$ after the union because of how the countable ordinals are all over the place in the collection, it is automatically well ordered when we view it under $\in$
@MrAP you can't fill up $b$ places
But then I am not sure if any law of excluded middle is implied here...
@Secret I tend to agree with you
@Secret no I still don't see any instances of LEM
everything here is constructive
Sure, we still cannot deal with that $\alpha < \beta$ case because there must exists $\alpha,\beta \in S$ that lacked ordinal notation due to the nature of $\omega_1^{CK}$ and thus we cannot figure how to construct an (explicit) injection between them, but if the previous messages holds, then we can at least showed that $\omega_1$ exists
But suppose the argument does not work and there's still some excluded middle somewhere we don't see), then I am fine defining the aleph function (hence existence of well ordered uncountable sets) as an extra axiom in ZF to construct well ordered sets $\omega_{\alpha}$
09:34
Recently I've been thinking about constructing ZFC in graph theory, not because it's more intuitive, but because it's less intuitive, so people won't apply blind intuition.
how would that work, so you are identifying elements of graphs (edges and vertices) with sets somehow?
For example, the axiom of union says that for every node X there is a node Y such that every node Z with Z->T->X for some T satisfies Z->Y
the vertices are the sets and the edges (directed) are the set memberships
I should denote Z->T->X as Z is twice connected to X
for every node X there is a node Y such that the nodes connected to Y are precisely the nodes twice-connected to X
Hmm, so Z is X U Y?
no, Y is U X
I'm using the terminologies of trees (namely, node), because regularity prohibits cycles
yup
hmmm, let me think what the graph will look like if Z,T,X,Y are all plotted in the same paper
09:42
and the axiom of empty set is simply "there is a root"
and I am guessing Z is some set that contains $\bigcup X$ and $X$?
"The probability of having no car is 0.3, the probability of having one is 0.6, and the probability of having two is 0.1. There are a thousand households utilizing a common parking lot with said probabilities. How many parking spots are needed in order for the parking lot to fit all cars with a 90% certainty?"

I've been staring at this one for a while. Does anyone have a hint of some sort?
@Secret why do you join T and Y?
no, Z is an element of Y
i.e. and element of an element of X
you got the memberships in the wrong directions
Ah I see
15 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
for every node X there is a node Y such that the nodes connected to Y are precisely the nodes twice-connected to X
> the nodes connected to Y are precisely the nodes twice-connected to X
So I thought T and Y are connected
Z is the node connected to Y
Z is twice-connected to X
09:54
Ok, so Z is an element of Y iff Z is an element of T that is an element of X
and since there are many Ts, then Y contains the union of X
I am also suspcting axiom of infinty will look like this:
Z->A1->A2->A3->A4->...
|
V
U
That is, Z is in U iff Z is in a chain of nested sets

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