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m Remove {{eq}}, which is not going to work after its target becomes a magic word. |
A proof by refutation (e.g., that assuming the real numbers are countable leads to a contradiction) is not a proof by contradiction. A proof by contradiction proceeds by refuting the *negation* of the original conclusion, thereby implying the conclusion itself. Cantor's diagonal argument is *not* a proof by contradiction. Tag: Reverted |
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On December 2, Cantor responded that his question does have interest: "It would be nice if it could be answered; for example, provided that it could be answered ''no'', one would have a new proof of [[Liouville number|Liouville's theorem]] that there are transcendental numbers."<ref>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|p=13}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Gray|1994|p=827}}.</ref>
On December 7, Cantor sent Dedekind a
{{Anchor|Cantor's December 7, 1873 proof}}
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