Re: Is the universe a set? Probably not.

2000-10-24 Thread Hal Ruhl
My particular approach is to base the universe on the idea that it is a physical isomorphism of but one of a "set" of incomplete, finite, consistent FAS [ifc-FAS]. Members of this "set" occasionally [no "time" connotations] "freeze out" spontaneously from a growing, seething, foamy fractal of

Re: Is the universe a set? Probably not.

2000-10-24 Thread hal
Christoph writes: > In addition, wavefunctions can be seen as functions over > space and time, so that the minimum measureable intervals > which make it impossible to say that space and time are sets, > allow to deduce that it is impossible that wavefunctions > form sets. (At Planck scales, of c