If you come up with a different self-consistent definition of how to compare sizes of sets (“e.g. alicorn-bigger”), that would be fine. Both definitions can live happily together in the happy world of mathematics. Note that “self-consistent definition” is harder than it sounds.
There are cases where mainstream mathematical tradition was faced with competing definitions. Currently, the gamma function is the usual extension of the factorial function to the reals, but at one time, there were alternative definitions competing to be standardized.
Another example: The calculus was motivated by thought experiments involving infinitesimals, but some “paradoxes” were discovered, and infinitistic reasoning was thought to be the culprit. By replacing all of the arguments with epsilon-delta analogs, the main stream of mathematics was able to derive the same results while avoiding infinitistic reasoning. Eventually, Abraham Robinson developed non-standard analysis, showing an alternative, and arguably more intuitive, way to avoid the paradoxes.
If you come up with a different self-consistent definition of how to compare sizes of sets (“e.g. alicorn-bigger”), that would be fine. Both definitions can live happily together in the happy world of mathematics. Note that “self-consistent definition” is harder than it sounds.
There are cases where mainstream mathematical tradition was faced with competing definitions. Currently, the gamma function is the usual extension of the factorial function to the reals, but at one time, there were alternative definitions competing to be standardized.
http://www.luschny.de/math/factorial/hadamard/HadamardsGammaFunction.html
Another example: The calculus was motivated by thought experiments involving infinitesimals, but some “paradoxes” were discovered, and infinitistic reasoning was thought to be the culprit. By replacing all of the arguments with epsilon-delta analogs, the main stream of mathematics was able to derive the same results while avoiding infinitistic reasoning. Eventually, Abraham Robinson developed non-standard analysis, showing an alternative, and arguably more intuitive, way to avoid the paradoxes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-standard_analysis
Thanks for that super-interesting link about factorial-interpolating functions!