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I separated Cauchy filter from Cauchy space.
Now with nonstandard analysis.
I’ve never encountered the word “adequality” before, and I thought I’d read a fair amount of NSA. I’m looking forward to seeing the page created…
I could have sworn that we already had it, which is initially why I linked to it. Since the internal search no longer works, I can't easily check whether the string adequal
appears anywhere in the Lab, but Google has neither word ‘adequal’ nor ‘adequality’ indexed, and I can't imagine how else that string would appear.
There is a Wikipedia page, but that's a historical treatment focussing on Fermat (who invented the term), not really what I remember seeing before. Google is no help. But I know that I was reading about this (in the context of NSA) somewhere.
Anyway, it simply means that two points are infinitely close together. For example, in a metric space, iff is infinitesimal. If is standard, then iff belongs to the monad of , which makes sense in any topological space (and in fact defines the topology); the relation between arbitrary hyperpoints makes sense in any uniform space (and in fact defines the uniformity). When both and are standard, then adequality reduces to the specialisation order (or its symmetrisation; I'm not sure how the term should be used in non-symmetric spaces).
Do you pronounce ’adequal’ as “ad+equal”, with approximately equal emphasis on the first and second syllables? (Up until now, it never occurred to me that there was an etymological connection between ’adequate’ and ’equate’, but a quick check in one of my dictionaries seems to indicate that.)
I did so pronounce it, but now that you mention ‘adequate’, maybe I won't. I've only seen it written.
Got it, thanks! I’m familiar with the concept, but I don’t think I’ve heard a name for it before, aside from “infinite closeness”.
Re #5, the Latin ancestor of adequate appears in Aquinas’s
Veritas est adaequatio intellectus et rei.
There’s a lot packed into that ’adequation’ of mind and thing.
Truth is the adequation of mind and thing, is that what it says?
That’s right.
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