hyperpape wrote:Bill Spight wrote:For one thing, integers are not a subset of rationals, strictly speaking. A rational is an ordered pair of integers. True, there are rationals that are equal to integers, but that is not exactly the same thing.
Have you read Benacerraf's "What Numbers Could Not Be"? I don't have settled views here, but I have enough sympathy towards the mathematical structuralist view that I get a funny feeling when I hear that rationals are really just ordered pairs of integers.
Related: do you have an opinion about what the reals really are?
No, I have not read Benacerraf. Nor do I say that rationals are
just ordered pairs of integers. They have certain defining properties. I am not at all up on structuralism. What I have been saying is what I learned as a kid. AFAIK, based upon what I just saw on Wikipedia about structuralism, the natural number 1, the integer 1, the rational number 1, the real number 1, the complex number 1, and the game (Conway number) 1, are all different, from a structuralist point of view, because they are part of different structures. Dunno. You could enlighten me on that.

I do not have an opinion about what real numbers
really are. I like Dedekind cuts, I do not like numbers born on day omega. {shrug} Buckminster Fuller thought that real numbers do not occur in nature. When I first heard that, I was skeptical, but now I tend to agree. If there are actual space-time continua, why quantum mechanics?
Con permiso, let me sketch out some of these different number systems, as I learned about them.
In the beginning was counting, such as notching sticks to denote numbers of cows, sheep, or days, etc. (Not what I learned as a kid, but from a cognitive point of view, counting numbers may be seen as part of sensory-motor schemata, which are basic preverbal schemata.) Today there is some question of whether to include 0 in the natural numbers, but historically, we know that people counted before they had a concept of zero.
There is no problem adding natural numbers, as the sum of two natural numbers is also a natural number. (Natural numbers are
closed under addition.) However, there is a problem with subtraction. 5 - 2 = 3, but what is 2 - 5?
Well, 0 and negative numbers were discovered/invented. They were not natural numbers, but integers. So what are integers? Integers may be constructed from natural numbers, as pairs of integers. (Structure!

)
First, let's define equality for these integers. (A,B) = (C,D) iff A+D = B+C.
Now addition: (A,B) + (C,D) = (A+C,B+D)
Now subtraction: (A,B) - (C,D) = (A+D,B+C)
Note that we can define subtraction for integers in terms of addition for natural numbers. Pretty cool, eh?
Well, we do not write integers this way. How can we write them in the usual fashion? Using -> to indicate "write as", here is how.
(A,A) -> 0
(A+1,A) -> +1
(A,A+1) -> -1
Etc.
Bingo!

(Note that I have written +1 for the integer, to distinguish it from the natural number 1. Conventionally we can drop the +.

)
Well, the integers are not closed under division. We can extend the integers to the rationals and define them as pairs of integers, as long as the second integer is not 0. When we do so, we can define division of rationals in terms of the multiplication of integers. (See my earlier post about that.) Our write rules are these.
(A,A) -> 1
(A,B) -> A/B
The rationals are not closed under exponentiation. (The ancient Greeks discovered irrational "numbers", such as the square root of 2, but I am not sure that they regarded them as numbers.) We can extend them to the real numbers, but not so simply as we extended the natural numbers and the integers. Most real numbers have no finite representations.
There is no solution to the equation, x^2 + 1 = 0, in real numbers, but we can extend the reals to the complex numbers. A complex number is an ordered pair of real numbers. (Ordered pairs again!

)
There are other kinds of numbers, surreals, hyperreals, etc., each belonging to different structures.
Above I referred to different kinds of 1s. Is there an archetype, 1? Maybe so. See Mick Jagger in the movie, "Performance", as an embodiment of the First Arcanum of the tarot.
