From the four postulates of the Dedekind cuts, namely (for (a,b) denoted as the cut, a,b being subsets of the rationals):
- Every rational number lies in exactly one of the sets a,b,
- a,b are not empty,
- Every element of a is smaller than every element of b,
- a has no biggest element,
it seems that Conway keeps only 3. Since 4. guarantees, that a real number x cannot be given by different cuts, can a surreal number be then given by different generalized cuts? (I'm just beginning to get into the Surreal numbers, so I don't have much preknowledge!)
Two different surreal numbers $x,y$ are equal if $x\leq y$ and $y\leq x$, where that order is defined in terms of their recursive parts. So you can have $$2=\{1\mid\}=\{0,1\mid\}=\{1\mid4\}=\{-17,1.5\mid\pi\}$$
It's good to think of Dedekind cuts only as far as "Ah, we can use sets of relatively simple numbers to build more complex numbers", but not a lot further than that.