I was talking about that, specifically, the relative difficulty of defining reals from rationals vs complex numbers from reals. You replied to me. :)
Moreover, I disagree that you have imagined real numbers. I don’t think you’ve imagined a single real number at all in the manner you describe. Why should I believe you've even described anything that isn't rational to begin with? For instance, 0.999... is the same as 1. Why should I not think that whatever decimal expansion you're imagining is, similarly, equivalent to a rational number we already know about? Occam's razor would reasonably suggest you're just imagining different representations of objects already accounted for in the rationals. After all, an infinite amount of precision captured by an infinite nonrepreating string of digits could easily just converge back to a number we already know.
Moreover, I disagree that you have imagined real numbers. I don’t think you’ve imagined a single real number at all in the manner you describe. Why should I believe you've even described anything that isn't rational to begin with? For instance, 0.999... is the same as 1. Why should I not think that whatever decimal expansion you're imagining is, similarly, equivalent to a rational number we already know about? Occam's razor would reasonably suggest you're just imagining different representations of objects already accounted for in the rationals. After all, an infinite amount of precision captured by an infinite nonrepreating string of digits could easily just converge back to a number we already know.