"EEEE..." and not a cloth-cap in sight
"The acronym EEEE abbreviates
"everything |
enfolds |
everything |
else" |
- where the word 'enfolds' means 'contains within itself'. A theory in which some interpretation of the EEEE principle holds, is said to possess (the property of) wholeness; that is, each part contains, within itself, the whole (more precisely, the near-whole: every other part). We first discuss classical set theory and wholeness. We then interpret EEEE set theoretically and investigate whole set theory. A method is described by which classical set theory can be made to manifest a degree of wholeness, and further lines of investigation are suggested. A brief discussion of various examples of the EEEE principle is given in the Appendix"
Blizardo, W. (1989). EEEE: SET THEORY AND WHOLENESS. Logique Et Analyse, 32(127/128), NOUVELLE SÉRIE, 215-239. Retrieved September 4, 2020, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/44084274
Please note in posting this, I am not trying to suggest that I understand the paper: as a whole - or even several parts!.
n.b. Posted in Wigan - just a cloth-cap insight.
Poetic license ack: “Eee lad, we’re off to that there North England”
https://twitter.com/BarristerSecret/status/1223260008256765953?s=20