On 12/3/2025 3:00 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:


On Tuesday, December 2, 2025 at 3:51:45 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:



    On 12/2/2025 1:24 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:


    On Monday, December 1, 2025 at 10:37:16 PM UTC-7 Russell Standish
    wrote:

        On Mon, Dec 01, 2025 at 08:07:14PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
        >
        >
        > On Monday, December 1, 2025 at 3:46:40 PM UTC-7 Russell
        Standish wrote:
        >
        > On Sat, Nov 29, 2025 at 11:13:05PM -0800, Alan Grayson wrote:
        > >
        > >
        > > On Friday, November 28, 2025 at 3:26:03 PM UTC-7 Russell
        Standish wrote:
        > >
        > > Sorry - I can't make sense of your question.
        > >
        > >
        > > The Axiom of Choice (AoC) asserts that given an
        uncountable set of sets,
        > each
        > > one being
        > > uncountable, there is a set composed of one element of
        each set of the
        > > uncountable set
        > > of sets. The AoC doesn't tell us how such a set is
        constructed, only that
        > we
        > > can assume it
        > > exists. So, in chosing an origin for the coordinate
        system for a plane
        > say, we
        > > have to apply
        > > the AoC for a single uncountable set, the plane. But
        there's no way to
        > > construct it. Does
        > > this make sense? AG
        > >
        >
        > I don't see the axiom of choice has much bearing here. To
        choose an
        > origin, we simply need to choose one point from a single
        uncountable
        > set of points. We label finite sets of points all the time
        - geometry
        > would be impossible otherwise - consider triangles with
        vertices
        > labelled A,B and C.
        >
        >
        > You write "we simply need to choose one point from a single
        uncountable set
        > points", but how exactly can we do that! That's the issue,
        the construction of
        > the coordinate system. In fact, there's no credible
        procedure for doing that,
        > so
        > we need the AoC to assert that it can be done. IMO, this is
        an esoteric issue.
        > For example, we can't just assert we can use the number
        ZERO to construct
        > the real line, since with ZERO we have, in effect, a
        coordinate system.AG
        >

        Rubbish - it is not controversial to pick a set of points from a
        finite set of uncountable sets. As I said, we've been doing
        that since
        building ziggurats on the Mesopotamian plain. AoC is only
        controversial when it comes to uncountable sets of
        uncountable sets.


    *It's subtle, maybe too subtle for you to see its relevance.
    You're imaginIng throwing*
    *a dart at a flat piece of paper, but that falls far short of a
    viable/construction /of a *
    *coordinate system on a plane. You can imagine it being done and
    that's the extent*
    *of your proof. AG *
    A coordinate system is anything that supplies a unique set of
    numbers to label every point such that the numbers are
    continuous.  I think you have and exaggerated idea of what needs
    to be constructed.

    Brent


Presumably, you have a more rigorous approach, say for R^2, by imagining a plane, or using a piece of flat paper, and throwing a dart at it to define the origin.   AG
You can choose any point and make it the origin, which just means you give it the label (0,0).  No physics can depend on the choice of origin or the coordinate system.

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