Cat275
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Ok.Nah, infinite^infinite is the easiest way to understand uncountable infinite, which mean Aleph 1, or infinite recursion of infinity
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Ok.Nah, infinite^infinite is the easiest way to understand uncountable infinite, which mean Aleph 1, or infinite recursion of infinity
Btw where can i see this? Iirc this doesn't exist in the continuum hypothesis atleast last time i checked.Nah, infinite^infinite is the easiest way to understand uncountable infinite, which mean Aleph 1, or infinite recursion of infinity
Because infinite^infinite is simple math. Continuum Hypothesis create set of cardinal number, so they use thing like Aleph instead, but they are not different.Btw where can i see this? Iirc this doesn't exist in the continuum hypothesis atleast last time i checked.
(In wikipedia atleast.)
Alright so.... bassically i can't see it in a continuum hypothesis then? since it's just a simple recursion of infinities.Because infinite^infinite is simple math. Continuum Hypothesis create set of cardinal number, so they use thing like Aleph instead, but they are not different.