ok here's a more concrete + human understandable proof of uncountability
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RT @pawnofcthulhu
cute
one quote "the tile admits uncountably many tilings": is it even possible to have a set of tiles that aperiodically tile the plane without having uncountably many tilings? https://twitter.com/cs_kaplan/status/1637996332475359232
https://twitter.com/pawnofcthulhu/status/1638004102352498688
so we can always choose one so that our current patch (and any subpatches, and with these we'll eventually have all finite patches in S) occurs infinitely often in T, by the infinite pigeonhole principle
so lemma (2) done.
(more thread)
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RT @pawnofcthulhu
alternative proof of the last bit: for any tiling T let P_k(T) be the set of ways T covers a kxk square
https://twitter.com/pawnofcthulhu/status/1644981416533594112
now assume there is no T->T and there are countably many tilings
let's organise them into a list
T1, T2, ...