Concerning the successor function in Peano's axioms, what prevents me from defining it in the following way:
0 to 2, 2 to 1, 1 to 4, 4 to 3, 3 to 6, 6 to 5, 5 to 8, 8 to 7 ... and so on.
It seems this satisfies the axioms? Please help! Thank you :)
Concerning the successor function in Peano's axioms, what prevents me from defining it in the following way:
0 to 2, 2 to 1, 1 to 4, 4 to 3, 3 to 6, 6 to 5, 5 to 8, 8 to 7 ... and so on.
It seems this satisfies the axioms? Please help! Thank you :)
It works ...
We have to note that according to Peano's axioms the symbol $1$ is introduced as the name for the successor of $0$; thus, according to your approach, we have to use $1$ to denote the "real" number $2$ (the "new" successor of $0$).
Consider that Peano's axioms include the recursive axioms for sum and product.
For sum :
$\forall x(x+0=x)$
$\forall x \forall y (x+S(y)=S(x+y))$.
Thus, applying the second axiom with e.g. $x :=1$ and $y := 0$, we have that :
$1+S(0)=S(1)=4$,
because in the "reformed" sequence : $0,2,1,4,3,\ldots$, the successor of $1$ is $4$.
Consider now :
$2+S(0)=S(0)+S(0)$,
because $2$ is the "new" successor of $0$; thus :
$2+S(0)=S(0)+S(0)=S(S(0)+0)=S(S(0))=S(2)=1$,
because $1$ is the successor of $2$.
Thus, your proposed "reform" seems consistent, because the operation of "adding to $n$ the successor of $0$" still produces the successor of $n$.
Now, there is an easy way to avoid this apparent confusion : we can introduce new symbols :
$1^*$ for the successor of $0$, i.e. as a new "name" for $2$,
$2^*$ for the successor of the successor of $0$, i.e. for the successor of $2$, i.e. as a new "name" for $1$,
$3^*$ for the successor of the successor of the successor of $0$, i.e. for the successor of $1$, i.e. as a new "name" for $4$,
and so on.
In this way, we have relabeleld the "reformed" sequence : $0,2,1,4,3,\ldots$ with a sequence of new "names" : $0, 1^*, 2^*,3^*,\ldots$.
Using them in the above "computations", we get :
$2^*+S(0)=2^* + 1^*=3^*$
and it is correct, because $3^*$ is the new "name" for $4$.
In the same way :
$1^*+S(0)=1^*+1^*=2^*$
and again it is correct, because $2^*$ is the new "name" for $1$.
Conclusion : the proposed "reform" us useless.
According to Peano's axioms the "real" number $1$ has only one "relevant" property : to be the (unique) successor of $0$, i.e. the successor of the unique number without successor.
As long as we satisfy the two basic property of the successor function :
$0$ has no successor
no two different numbers can have the same successor
there are no "metaphysical" properties that can distinguish two numbers for each other if not their "relative position" with respect to $0$.
Only a single number is actually named in the Peano Axioms (either 0 or 1 depending on personal preference of the writer). There is nothing in them that prevents you from assigning goofy, non-standard names to the other numbers.
The second axiom, as usually presented, says that every number has a unique successor that is also a number, i.e. the successor relation is a function mapping $\mathbb{N}$ to itself.
$S: \mathbb{N}\to \mathbb{N}$
or equivalently
$\forall x\in \mathbb{N}:S(x)\in \mathbb{N}$
or equivalently
$\forall x\in \mathbb{N}: \exists y\in \mathbb{N}:S(x)=y$
Applying the latter statement for $x=0$ (assuming $0$ is the "first" number), we would then have:
$\exists y\in \mathbb{N}:S(0)=y$
Technically, we could then use the rule of existential specification to assign to $S(0)$ any name but $0$, say $S(0)=\text{Fluffy}$.
Similarly, we could assign to $S(\text{Fluffy})$ any name but but $0$ or Fluffy, say $S(\text{Fluffy})=\text{Bobo}$.
So, the first three numbers would then be: $0$, Fluffy and Bobo.
Given the standard successor function $S: n \mapsto n+1$ on $\Bbb N$, if $\beta$ is any bijection of $\Bbb N$ then
$\quad \displaystyle \beta^{-1} \circ S \circ \beta: \Bbb N \to \Bbb N $
satisfies the Peano axioms.
Let $\tau$ be defined by
$$ \tau(n) = \left\{\begin{array}{lr} 0\, \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\,\text{ |} & \text{for } n = 0\\ 2m-1 \,\;\;\; \text{ |} & \text{for } n =2m \text{ for } m \gt 0 \\ 2m+2 \,\;\;\; \text{ |} & \text{for } n =2m +1 \end{array}\right\} $$
The mapping $\tau$ is easily seen to be a bijection satisfying $\displaystyle \tau^{-1} = \tau$. Moreover the OP's candidate successor function is equal to
$\quad \displaystyle \tau \circ S \circ \tau$