John Northern Solves Cantor's and Russell's Paradoxes
Two new methods, Ispace and Tspace, in addition to Logic and Venn diagrams, were used to solve Cantor's and Russell's Paradoxes. The paradoxes evolved from Cantor's research with sets and the continuum hypothesis.
HENDERSON, Nev., March 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- John Northern, a scientist and philosopher, has solved paradoxes, which no one thought would ever be solved. Cantor's research on sets and his creation of the continuum hypothesis, CH, in 1878 have become a perplexing problem for mathematicians with no complete and satisfactory solution. Some of the problems, which have emerged from the research conducted on sets, are the contradictions and the formation of paradoxes; more specifically, Cantor's paradox.
As set theory began to evolve, another paradox surfaced, which was named Russell's paradox. Russell's paradox was so debilitating to mathematics that the ZFC made axioms to allow mathematicians to ignore and work around the paradox. But the paradox is still there, or was, until John Northern solved it.
In his essay two concepts are used: Ispace (the imagination) and Tspace (three dimensional reality, where all things real exist), in order to shed new light on the problems of set theory, the CH, and the related paradoxes. This is a new method for solving these problems.
It is because of the concept and the use of infinity that much of the confusions, contradictions, and paradoxes have arisen in set theory. With his new method of solving paradoxes, John Northern has clarified many of these problems created by infinity.
Also, Logic and Venn diagrams were used in the solution of Russell's paradox.
To read how the paradoxes were solved you can read the essay written by John Northern at johnnorthern.com. The essay is short, approximately nine thousand nine hundred words, without a lot of complicated scientific or mathematical expressions involved. Click on Cantor in the upper left side bar. It's free.
About John Northern:
Dabbles in science, loves philosophy, and writes eBooks—mostly science fiction and fantasy.
Contact:
John Rose
702-454-0825
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SOURCE John Northern
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