WM wrote:
> Am Freitag, 14. April 2017 20:02:54 UTC+2 schrieb Ralf Bader:
>> WM wrote:
>
>> >> The axioms prove that that there are three points not on a straight
>> >> line.
>> >
>> > That is impossible if most straight lines have no definition other than
>> > "with parameters".
>>
>> This is very well possible. In Hilbert's "Grundlagen der Geometrie", 11th
>> ed., Axiom I.3 says: "Auf einer Geraden gibt es stets wenigstens zwei
>> Punkte. Es gibt wenigstens drei Punkte, die nicht auf einer Geraden
>> liegen." That is, "On a line, there are always at least two points. There
>> are at least three points which do not lie on a single line."
>
> That concerns finitely defined straight lines.
Those axioms are about lines, not "finitely defined straight lines". That
you are probably too stupid to grasp this does not change facts.
In fact none of Hilbert's axioms allows to "define" any line. There is no
such thing as an empty set or the number one, as initial constants, from
which other constants can be defined by various procedures like taking the
power set or the successor number. There can not be, because the space of
euclidean geometry is homogeneous.
>> OK, so the assertion "The axioms prove that that there are three points
>> not on a straight line." might be considered wrong, as there is no proof
>> required, because the assertion is just one of Hilbert's axioms.
>>
> If you consider only finitely defined real numbers, then their set is
> countable and all are in trichotomy with each other. Of course this is
> provable.
Of course this is not provable because it is wrong.
> The assumption of uncountably many reals "defined by parameters"
> is in contradiction with the axiom of trichotomy. This contradiction is as
> clear as that with the three points on a straight line and Hilbert's
> axioms.
>
> Try to get a clue why I devised that example.
You devised that example because you are too stupid to grasp abstract
notions beyond "finitely defined" instances. And therefore, by principal
reeasons, you are too stupid for mathematics in general. This is a fact,
proven beyond any reasonable doubt. By the way, also physical space has a
lot of homogeneity. Insofar as you are provably too stupid to grasp this
concept you are also too stupid for physics.