Axiom of regularityCategory:Set theory\nThe axiom of regularity (also known as the axiom of foundation) is one of the axioms of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory. In first-order logic the axiom reads:
ProofsAxiom of regularity implies that no set is an element of itself Let a be an element of itself. Then define B = {a}, which is a set by the pair axiom. Applying the axiom of foundation to B, we see that the only element of B, namely, a, must be disjoint from B. But by the definitions of a and B we see that they have an element in common (namely, a again). This is a contradiction, and hence no such a exists. Axiom of regularity implies that no infinite descending sequence of sets exists Let f be a function of the natural numbers with f(n+1) an element of f(n) for each n. Define S = {f(n): n a natural number}, the range of f, which can be seen to be a set from the formal definition of a function. Applying the axiom of regularity to S, let f(k) be an element of S which is disjoint from S. But by the definitions of f and S, f(k) and S have an element in common (namely f(k+1)). This is a contradiction, hence no such f exists. No infinite descending sequence of sets implies axiom of regularity Let the non-empty set S be a counter-example to the axiom of regularity, that is every element x of S has a non-empty intersection with S. Let g be a choice function for S, that is a map such that g(s) is an element of s for each non-empty subset s of S. Now define the function f on the non-negative integers recursively as follows:
External linkhttp://www.trinity.edu/cbrown/topics_in_logic/sets/sets.html contains an informative description of the axiom of regularity under the section on Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory. |
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"Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech." - Martin Fraquhar Tupper |
