>>11713513No. If anything they serve opposite purposes. Assembly languages are necessary to provide an interface for the instruction sets of a given chip so that there's a practical means for specifying the exaction of programs, take them away and you're back to either hand-wiring things or getting people to use abacuses.
Set language is an attempt to provide a unifying language for all mathematics, but as no means of really being well defined, most mathematicians basically don't care about it in itself, and if it didn't exist they'd just do mathematics with whatever conventions, notational or otherwise, their field uses anyway.