cyclops wrote:Integer division is closed already ( i.e. defined on Z X Z0 ). What you close is some (proto-
) division defined on a specific subset of Z X Z0 ( consisting of the (proto-)dividable tuples ). a is protodivable by b if there is a number c such that bc==a. Thus you generate the rationals. That is what they taught me in my first year course "number theory" some forty+ years ago. Somewhere I must still have Walter Rudin's "Principles of Analysis", a very nice, be it dry book. It seems you mix up integer division with this proto division. But both are stricly no divisions on Z.
So what about SmoothOper? Strangely enough Cantor's proof has nothing to do with division or rationals so this whole discussion is futile.
I don't exactly remember the details (a shame given that you almost do after 40 years and I don't with 10,) but we defined divisibility properties (seems similar to what you write as proto-division) via ideals and ideal intersections and other properties, so it could be extended to any ring.
And yes, the proof has nothing to do with division, so I'm not sure what the point is either.