- 13,725
- 3,670
Anyway, now that I'm on pc, I feel compelled to make a better response...
From aleph-2 sets and onwards, each of those is a transcendence into 1-A (for example, aleph-2 amount of anything would be baseline 1-A, aleph-3 amount of anything would be a transcendence into 1-A, etc), so aleph-omega would be equivalent to 1-A+
Aleph-omega universes is 1-A+If you have aleph-omega amount of universes that's only 2-A without further context.
From aleph-2 sets and onwards, each of those is a transcendence into 1-A (for example, aleph-2 amount of anything would be baseline 1-A, aleph-3 amount of anything would be a transcendence into 1-A, etc), so aleph-omega would be equivalent to 1-A+
This can be extrapolated to larger cardinal numbers as well, such as aleph-3, aleph-4, and so on, and works in much the same way as 1-C and 1-B in that regard.
KekNo that's absolutely not how the wiki treats alephs.
They don't need to because aleph-1 universes is the equivalent of a R>F difference. Or to be more exact, we equate a R>F difference to uncountable infinite quantities, because if taken literally, R>F feats would be 1-A or 0. The tiering system has its basis in mathematics, not esotericism.Only if those universes are stated to have R>F difference.
Ask any staff
Okay, and I just provided it. Tier 1 can only be reached from 2-A with qualitative superiority. Adding more universes doesn't get you there.
No, it isn't, the same way infinite universes isn't "qualitatively superior" to finite universes. It's just more universes. Adding more universes doesn't bridge the gap between Tier 2 and Tier 1.
I think you killed the FAQ three times.If we're referring to dimensions, yes, but not amounts of universes.
That's a fascinating theory, but as it stands, there is no such standard on the wiki that claims this.
At some point, the sheer quantity of something breaches into the next cardinality.And higher infinites AKA alephs are not some "transidental" shit but just how many things in this case, how many universes there are.