Am Donnerstag 18 Februar 2010 19:19:36 schrieb Nick Rudnick:
Hi Hans,
agreed, but, in my eyes, you directly point to the problem:
* doesn't this just delegate the problem to the topic of limit
operations, i.e., in how far is the term «closed» here more perspicuous?
It's fairly natural in German, abgeschlossen: closed, finished, complete;
offen: open, ongoing.
* that's (for a very simple concept)
That concept (open and closed sets, topology more generally) is *not* very
simple. It has many surprising aspects.
«concept» is a word of many meanings; to become more specific: Its
*definition* is...
the way that maths prescribes:
+ historical background: «I take "closed" as coming from being closed
under limit operations - the origin from analysis.»
+ definition backtracking: «A closure operation c is defined by the
property c(c(x)) = c(x).
Actually, that's incomplete, missing are
- c(x) contains x
- c(x) is minimal among the sets containing x with y = c(y).
Even more workload to master... This strengthens the thesis that
definition recognition requires a considerable amount of one's effort...
If one takes c(X) = the set of limit points of
Not limit points, "Berührpunkte" (touching points).
X, then it is the smallest closed set under this operation. The closed
sets X are those that satisfy c(X) = X. Naming the complements of the
closed sets open might have been introduced as an opposite of closed.»
418 bytes in my file system... how many in my brain...? Is it efficient,
inevitable? The most fundamentalist justification I heard in this regard
is: «It keeps people off from thinking the could go without the
definition...» Meanwhile, we backtrack definition trees filling books,
no, even more... In my eyes, this comes equal to claiming: «You have
nothing to understand this beyond the provided authoritative definitions
-- your understanding is done by strictly following these.»
But you can't understand it except by familiarising yourself with the
definitions and investigating their consequences.
The name of a concept can only help you remembering what the definition
was. Choosing "obvious" names tends to be misleading, because there usually
are things satisfying the definition which do not behave like the "obvious"
name implies.
So if you state that the used definitions are completely unpredictable
so that they have to be studied completely -- which already ignores
that human brain is an analogous «machine» --, you, by information
theory, imply that these definitions are somewhat arbitrary, don't you?
This in my eyes would contradict the concept such definition systems
have about themselves.
Back to the case of open/closed, given we have an idea about sets -- we
in most cases are able to derive the concept of two disjunct sets facing
each other ourselves, don't we? The only lore missing is just a Bool:
Which term fits which idea? With a reliable terminology using
«bordered/unbordered», there is no ambiguity, and we can pass on
reading, without any additional effort.
And we'd be very wrong. There are sets which are simultaneously open and
closed. It is bad enough with the terminology as is, throwing in the
boundary (which is an even more difficult concept than open/closed) would
only make things worse.
Really? As «open == not closed» can similarly be implied,
bordered/unbordered even in this concern remains at least equal...