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It's from my other thread, but I think asking it separately is better. Will this count. It says set theory but the content is meta-theory and transcendence?
"The hypergeneral set theory is not a theory for mathematical research. It ceased to be when we started adding layers of meta-theories, layer upon layer of transcendence. No lower layers can affect the meta-theories at higher layers, meta-theories are not made out of, or affected by, lower theories and structures. This theory is not for science, it's for transcendence, for the ultimate understanding of divinity."
Based on what I see, a meta-theory is both independent from the sub-theories and is not made of them, satisfying the 1-A requirement.
Things that came out in search and summary:
"A meta-theory functions as a higher-level framework that analyzes, describes, or prescribes rules for other theories—it exists "about" or "beyond" them rather than being derived from or built out of them directly."
"This separation ensures the meta-theory can critique or integrate sub-theories without being reducible to or reliant on their specific content for its own structure."
"The hypergeneral set theory is not a theory for mathematical research. It ceased to be when we started adding layers of meta-theories, layer upon layer of transcendence. No lower layers can affect the meta-theories at higher layers, meta-theories are not made out of, or affected by, lower theories and structures. This theory is not for science, it's for transcendence, for the ultimate understanding of divinity."
Based on what I see, a meta-theory is both independent from the sub-theories and is not made of them, satisfying the 1-A requirement.
Things that came out in search and summary:
"A meta-theory functions as a higher-level framework that analyzes, describes, or prescribes rules for other theories—it exists "about" or "beyond" them rather than being derived from or built out of them directly."
"This separation ensures the meta-theory can critique or integrate sub-theories without being reducible to or reliant on their specific content for its own structure."
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