Abstract
In this paper, we sketch the development
of two important themes of modern set theory, both
of which can be regarded as growing out of work of
Kurt Gödel. We begin with a review of some basic
concepts and conventions of set theory.
§0. The ordinal
numbers were Georg Cantor's deepest contribution
to mathematics. After the natural numbers 0, 1, …,
n, … comes the first
infinite ordinal number ω, followed by ω + 1, ω +
2, …, ω + ω, … and so forth. ω is the first
limit ordinal as it is
neither 0 nor a successor ordinal. We follow the
von Neumann convention, according to which each
ordinal number α is identified with the set {ν ∣ ν
α} of its predecessors. The ∈ relation on ordinals
thus coincides with <. We have 0 = ∅ and α + 1
= α ∪ {α}. According to the usual set-theoretic
conventions, ω is identified with the first
infinite cardinal ℵ0,
similarly for the first uncountable ordinal number
ω1 and the first uncountable
cardinal number ℵ1, etc. We
thus arrive at the following picture:
The von Neumann
hierarchy divides the class
V of all sets into a
hierarchy of sets
Vα
indexed by the ordinal numbers. The recursive
definition reads:
(where } is
the power set of
x);
Vλ
=
∪v<λVv
for limit ordinals λ. We can represent this
hierarchy by the following picture.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
35 articles.
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