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Re: [lojban] 2 maths questions



la and cusku di'e

2. The set of even numbers and the set of integers are both infinite,
but how does one express the notion that the latter is bigger, because
there are twice as many integers as even numbers?

That erroneous notion can be expressed, for example, as:

lei relmeina'u lei kacna'u cu xadba le ka kaclai
The even numbers are half the integers in number.

In what property
does the set of integers exceed the set of even numbers?

Apparent numerosity?

I presume
there is a well-known answer to this question, but the best I can
do on my own is something along the lines of "frequency" or
"distributional density" (within the set of integers/numbers/whatever);

Certainly in any given finite interval (with more than one number
anyway) the integers outnumber the evens, but not in total.

if that is the way to go, then how does one actually say it in Lojban?

lei kacna'u lei relmeina'u cu zmadu le ka denmi

co'o mi'e xorxes

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