Look up Appendix:Glossary of set theory in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
This is a glossary of set theory.
Greek
- α
 - Often used for an ordinal
 - β
 - 1. βX is the Stone–Čech compactification of X
 - 2. An ordinal
 - γ
 - A gamma number, an ordinal of the form ωα
 - Γ
 - The Gamma function of ordinals. In particular Γ0 is the Feferman–Schütte ordinal.
 - δ
 - 1. A delta number is an ordinal of the form ωωα
 - 2. A limit ordinal
 - Δ (Greek capital delta, not to be confused with a triangle ∆)
 - 1. A set of formulas in the Lévy hierarchy
 - 2. A delta system
 - ε
 - An epsilon number, an ordinal with ωε=ε
 - η
 - 1. The order type of the rational numbers
 - 2. An eta set, a type of ordered set
 - 3. ηα is an Erdős cardinal
 - θ
 - The order type of the real numbers
 - Θ
 - The supremum of the ordinals that are the image of a function from ωω (usually in models where the axiom of choice is not assumed)
 - κ
 - 1. Often used for a cardinal, especially the critical point of an elementary embedding
 - 2. The Erdős cardinal κ(α) is the smallest cardinal such that κ(α) → (α)< ω
 - λ
 - 1. Often used for a cardinal
 - 2. The order type of the real numbers
 - μ
 - A measure
 - Π
 - 1. A product of cardinals
 - 2. A set of formulas in the Lévy hierarchy
 - ρ
 - The rank of a set
 - σ
 - countable, as in σ-compact, σ-complete and so on
 - Σ
 - 1. A sum of cardinals
 - 2. A set of formulas in the Lévy hierarchy
 - φ
 - A Veblen function
 - ω
 - 1. The smallest infinite ordinal
 - 2. ωα is an alternative name for ℵα, used when it is considered as an ordinal number rather than a cardinal number
 - Ω
 - 1. The class of all ordinals, related to Cantor's absolute
 - 2. Ω-logic is a form of logic introduced by Hugh Woodin
 
!$@
- ∈, =, ⊆, ⊇, ⊃, ⊂, ∪, ∩, ∅
 - Standard set theory symbols with their usual meanings (is a member of, equals, is a subset of, is a superset of, is a proper superset of, is a proper subset of, union, intersection, empty set)
 - ∧ ∨ → ↔ ¬ ∀ ∃
 - Standard logical symbols with their usual meanings (and, or, implies, is equivalent to, not, for all, there exists)
 - ≡
 - An equivalence relation
 - ⨡
 - f ⨡ X is now the restriction of a function or relation f to some set X, though its original meaning was the corestriction
 - ↿
 - f↿X is the restriction of a function or relation f to some set X
 - ∆ (A triangle, not to be confused with the Greek letter Δ)
 - 1. The symmetric difference of two sets
 - 2. A diagonal intersection
 - ◊
 - The diamond principle
 - ♣
 - A clubsuit principle
 - □
 - The square principle
 - ∘
 - The composition of functions
 - ⁀
 - s⁀x is the extension of a sequence s by x
 - +
 - 1. Addition of ordinals
 - 2. Addition of cardinals
 - 3. α+ is the smallest cardinal greater than α
 - 4. B+ is the poset of nonzero elements of a Boolean algebra B
 - 5. The inclusive or operation in a Boolean algebra. (In ring theory it is used for the exclusive or operation)
 - ~
 - 1. The difference of two sets: x~y is the set of elements of x not in y.
 - 2. An equivalence relation
 - \
 - The difference of two sets: x\y is the set of elements of x not in y.
 - −
 - The difference of two sets: x−y is the set of elements of x not in y.
 - ≈
 - Has the same cardinality as
 - ×
 - A product of sets
 - /
 - A quotient of a set by an equivalence relation
 - ⋅
 - 1. x⋅y is the ordinal product of two ordinals
 - 2. x⋅y is the cardinal product of two cardinals
 - *
 - An operation that takes a forcing poset and a name for a forcing poset and produces a new forcing poset.
 - ∞
 - The class of all ordinals, or at least something larger than all ordinals
 - 1. Cardinal exponentiation
 - 2. Ordinal exponentiation
 - 1. The set of functions from β to α
 - →
 - 1. Implies
 - 2. f:X→Y means f is a function from X to Y.
 - 3.  The ordinary partition symbol, where κ→(λ)n
m means that for every coloring of the n-element subsets of κ with m colors there is a subset of size λ all of whose n-element subsets are the same color. - f ′ x
 - If there is a unique y such that ⟨x,y⟩ is in f then f ′ x is y, otherwise it is the empty set. So if f is a function and x is in its domain, then f ′ x is f(x).
 - f ″ X
 - f ″ X is the image of a set X by f. If f is a function whose domain contains X this is {f(x):x∈X}
 - [ ]
 - 1. M[G] is the smallest model of ZF containing G and all elements of M.
 - 2. [α]β is the set of all subsets of a set α of cardinality β, or of an ordered set α of order type β
 - 3. [x] is the equivalence class of x
 - { }
 - 1. {a, b, ...} is the set with elements a, b, ...
 - 2. {x : φ(x)} is the set of x such that φ(x)
 - ⟨ ⟩
 - ⟨a,b⟩ is an ordered pair, and similarly for ordered n-tuples
 - The cardinality of a set X
 - The value of a formula φ in some Boolean algebra
 - ⌜φ⌝
 - ⌜φ⌝ (Quine quotes, unicode U+231C, U+231D) is the Gödel number of a formula φ
 - ⊦
 - A⊦φ means that the formula φ follows from the theory A
 - ⊧
 - A⊧φ means that the formula φ holds in the model A
 - ⊩
 - The forcing relation
 - ≺
 - An elementary embedding
 - ⊥
 - The false symbol
 - p⊥q means that p and q are incompatible elements of a partial order
 - 0#
 - zero sharp, the set of true formulas about indiscernibles and order-indiscernibles in the constructible universe
 - 0†
 - zero dagger, a certain set of true formulas
 - The Hebrew letter aleph, which indexes the aleph numbers or infinite cardinals ℵα
 - The Hebrew letter beth, which indexes the beth numbers בα
 - A serif form of the Hebrew letter gimel, representing the gimel function
 - ת
 - The Hebrew letter Taw, used by Cantor for the class of all cardinal numbers
 
A
- 𝔞
 - The almost disjointness number, the least size of a maximal almost disjoint family of infinite subsets of ω
 - A
 - The Suslin operation
 - absolute
 - 1. A statement is called absolute if its truth in some model implies its truth in certain related models
 - 2. Cantor's absolute is a somewhat unclear concept sometimes used to mean the class of all sets
 - 3. Cantor's Absolute Infinite Ω is a somewhat unclear concept related to the class of all ordinals
 - AC
 - 1. AC is the Axiom of choice
 - 2. ACω is the Axiom of countable choice
 - AD
 - The axiom of determinacy
 - add
 - additivity
 - The additivity add(I) of I is the smallest number of sets of I with union not in I
 - additively
 - An ordinal is called additively indecomposable if it is not the sum of a finite number of smaller ordinals. These are the same as gamma numbers or powers of ω.
 - admissible
 - An admissible set is a model of Kripke–Platek set theory, and an admissible ordinal is an ordinal α such that Lα is an admissible set
 - AH
 - The generalized continuum hypothesis states that 2ℵα = ℵα+1
 - aleph
 - 1. The Hebrew letter ℵ
 - 2. An infinite cardinal
 - 3. The aleph function taking ordinals to infinite cardinals
 - 4. The aleph hypothesis is a form of the generalized continuum hypothesis
 - almost universal
 - A class is called almost universal if every subset of it is contained in some member of it
 - amenable
 - An amenable set is a set that is a model of Kripke–Platek set theory without the axiom of collection
 - analytic
 - An analytic set is the continuous image of a Polish space. (This is not the same as an analytical set)
 - analytical
 - The analytical hierarchy is a hierarchy of subsets of an effective Polish space (such as ω). They are definable by a second-order formula without parameters, and an analytical set is a set in the analytical hierarchy. (This is not the same as an analytic set)
 - antichain
 - An antichain is a set of pairwise incompatible elements of a poset
 - antinomy
 - paradox
 - arithmetic
 - The ordinal arithmetic is arithmetic on ordinal numbers
 - The cardinal arithmetic is arithmetic on cardinal numbers
 - arithmetical
 - The arithmetical hierarchy is a hierarchy of subsets of a Polish space that can be defined by first-order formulas
 - Aronszajn
 - 1. Nachman Aronszajn
 - 2. An Aronszajn tree is an uncountable tree such that all branches and levels are countable. More generally a κ-Aronszajn tree is a tree of cardinality κ such that all branches and levels have cardinality less than κ
 - atom
 - 1. An urelement, something that is not a set but allowed to be an element of a set
 - 2. An element of a poset such that any two elements smaller than it are compatible.
 - 3. A set of positive measure such that every measurable subset has the same measure or measure 0
 - atomic
 - An atomic formula (in set theory) is one of the form x=y or x∈y
 - axiom
 - Aczel's anti-foundation axiom states that every accessible pointed directed graph corresponds to a unique set
 - AD+ An extension of the axiom of determinacy
 - Axiom F states that the class of all ordinals is Mahlo
 - Axiom of adjunction Adjoining a set to another set produces a set
 - Axiom of amalgamation The union of all elements of a set is a set. Same as axiom of union
 - Axiom of choice The product of any set of non-empty sets is non-empty
 - Axiom of collection This can mean either the axiom of replacement or the axiom of separation
 - Axiom of comprehension The class of all sets with a given property is a set. Usually contradictory.
 - Axiom of constructibility Any set is constructible, often abbreviated as V=L
 - Axiom of countability Every set is hereditarily countable
 - Axiom of countable choice The product of a countable number of non-empty sets is non-empty
 - Axiom of dependent choice A weak form of the axiom of choice
 - Axiom of determinacy Certain games are determined, in other words one player has a winning strategy
 - Axiom of elementary sets describes the sets with 0, 1, or 2 elements
 - Axiom of empty set The empty set exists
 - Axiom of extensionality or axiom of extent
 - Axiom of finite choice Any product of non-empty finite sets is non-empty
 - Axiom of foundation Same as axiom of regularity
 - Axiom of global choice There is a global choice function
 - Axiom of heredity (any member of a set is a set; used in Ackermann's system.)
 - Axiom of infinity There is an infinite set
 - Axiom of limitation of size A class is a set if and only if it has smaller cardinality than the class of all sets
 - Axiom of pairing Unordered pairs of sets are sets
 - Axiom of power set The powerset of any set is a set
 - Axiom of projective determinacy Certain games given by projective set are determined, in other words one player has a winning strategy
 - Axiom of real determinacy Certain games are determined, in other words one player has a winning strategy
 - Axiom of regularity Sets are well founded
 - Axiom of replacement The image of a set under a function is a set. Same as axiom of substitution
 - Axiom of subsets The powerset of a set is a set. Same as axiom of powersets
 - Axiom of substitution The image of a set under a function is a set
 - Axiom of union The union of all elements of a set is a set
 - Axiom schema of predicative separation Axiom of separation for formulas whose quantifiers are bounded
 - Axiom schema of replacement The image of a set under a function is a set
 - Axiom schema of separation The elements of a set with some property form a set
 - Axiom schema of specification The elements of a set with some property form a set. Same as axiom schema of separation
 - Freiling's axiom of symmetry is equivalent to the negation of the continuum hypothesis
 - Martin's axiom states very roughly that cardinals less than the cardinality of the continuum behave like ℵ0.
 - The proper forcing axiom is a strengthening of Martin's axiom
 
B
- 𝔟
 - The bounding number, the least size of an unbounded family of sequences of natural numbers
 - B
 - A Boolean algebra
 - BA
 - Baumgartner's axiom, one of three axioms introduced by Baumgartner.
 - BACH
 - Baumgartner's axiom plus the continuum hypothesis.
 - Baire
 - 1. René-Louis Baire
 - 2. A subset of a topological space has the Baire property if it differs from an open set by a meager set
 - 3. The Baire space is a topological space whose points are sequences of natural numbers
 - 4. A Baire space is a topological space such that every intersection of a countable collection of open dense sets is dense
 - basic set theory
 - 1. Naive set theory
 - 2. A weak set theory, given by Kripke–Platek set theory without the axiom of collection. Sometimes also called "rudimentary set theory".[1]
 - BC
 - Berkeley cardinal
 - BD
 - Borel determinacy
 - Berkeley cardinal
 - A Berkeley cardinal is a cardinal κ in a model of ZF such that for every transitive set M that includes κ, there is a nontrivial elementary embedding of M into M with critical point below κ.
 - Bernays
 - 1. Paul Bernays
 - 2. Bernays–Gödel set theory is a set theory with classes
 - Berry's paradox
 - Berry's paradox considers the smallest positive integer not definable in ten words
 - beth
 - 1. The Hebrew letter ב
 - 2. A beth number בα
 - Beth
 - Evert Willem Beth, as in Beth definability
 - BG
 - Bernays–Gödel set theory without the axiom of choice
 - BGC
 - Bernays–Gödel set theory with the axiom of choice
 - boldface
 - The boldface hierarchy is a hierarchy of subsets of a Polish space, definable by second-order formulas with parameters (as opposed to the lightface hierarchy which does not allow parameters). It includes the Borel sets, analytic sets, and projective sets
 - Boolean algebra
 - A Boolean algebra is a commutative ring such that all elements satisfy x2=x
 - Borel
 - 1. Émile Borel
 - 2. A Borel set is a set in the smallest sigma algebra containing the open sets
 - bounding number
 - The bounding number is the least size of an unbounded family of sequences of natural numbers
 - BP
 - Baire property
 - BS
 - BST
 - Basic set theory
 - Burali-Forti
 - 1. Cesare Burali-Forti
 - 2. The Burali-Forti paradox states that the ordinal numbers do not form a set
 
C
- c
 - 𝔠
 - The cardinality of the continuum
 - ∁
 - Complement of a set
 - C
 - The Cantor set
 - cac
 - countable antichain condition (same as the countable chain condition)
 - Cantor
 - 1. Georg Cantor
 - 2. The Cantor normal form of an ordinal is its base ω expansion.
 - 3. Cantor's paradox says that the powerset of a set is larger than the set, which gives a contradiction when applied to the universal set.
 - 4. The Cantor set, a perfect nowhere dense subset of the real line
 - 5. Cantor's absolute infinite Ω is something to do with the class of all ordinals
 - 6. Cantor's absolute is a somewhat unclear concept sometimes used to mean the class of all sets
 - 7. Cantor's theorem states that the powerset operation increases cardinalities
 - Card
 - The cardinality of a set
 - cardinal
 - 1. A cardinal number is an ordinal with more elements than any smaller ordinal
 - cardinality
 - The number of elements of a set
 - categorical
 - 1. A theory is called categorical if all models are isomorphic. This definition is no longer used much, as first-order theories with infinite models are never categorical.
 - 2. A theory is called k-categorical if all models of cardinality κ are isomorphic
 - category
 - 1. A set of first category is the same as a meager set: a set that is the union of a countable number of nowhere-dense sets, and a set of second category is a set that is not of first category.
 - 2. A category in the sense of category theory.
 - ccc
 - countable chain condition
 - cf
 - The cofinality of an ordinal
 - CH
 - The continuum hypothesis
 - chain
 - A linearly ordered subset (of a poset)
 - cl
 - Abbreviation for "closure of" (a set under some collection of operations)
 - class
 - 1. A class is a collection of sets
 - 2. First class ordinals are finite ordinals, and second class ordinals are countable infinite ordinals
 - club
 - A contraction of "closed unbounded"
 - 1. A club set is a closed unbounded subset, often of an ordinal
 - 2. The club filter is the filter of all subsets containing a club set
 - 3. Clubsuit is a combinatorial principle similar to but weaker than the diamond principle
 - coanalytic
 - A coanalytic set is the complement of an analytic set
 - cofinal
 - A subset of a poset is called cofinal if every element of the poset is at most some element of the subset.
 - cof
 - cofinality
 - cofinality
 - 1. The cofinality of a poset (especially an ordinal or cardinal) is the smallest cardinality of a cofinal subset
 - 2. The cofinality cof(I) of an ideal I of subsets of a set X is the smallest cardinality of a subset B of I such that every element of I is a subset of something in B.
 - Cohen
 - 1. Paul Cohen
 - 2. Cohen forcing is a method for constructing models of ZFC
 - 3. A Cohen algebra is a Boolean algebra whose completion is free
 - Col
 - collapsing algebra
 - A collapsing algebra Col(κ,λ) collapses cardinals between λ and κ
 - complete
 - 1. "Complete set" is an old term for "transitive set"
 - 2. A theory is called complete if it assigns a truth value (true or false) to every statement of its language
 - 3. An ideal is called κ-complete if it is closed under the union of less than κ elements
 - 4. A measure is called κ-complete if the union of less than κ measure 0 sets has measure 0
 - 5. A linear order is called complete if every nonempty bounded subset has a least upper bound
 - Con
 - Con(T) for a theory T means T is consistent
 - condensation lemma
 - Gödel's condensation lemma says that an elementary submodel of an element Lα of the constructible hierarchy is isomorphic to an element Lγ of the constructible hierarchy
 - constructible
 - A set is called constructible if it is in the constructible universe.
 - continuum
 - The continuum is the real line or its cardinality
 - core
 - A core model is a special sort of inner model generalizing the constructible universe
 - countable antichain condition
 - A term used for the countable chain condition by authors who think terminology should be logical
 - countable chain condition
 - The countable chain condition (ccc) for a poset states that every antichain is countable
 - cov(I)
 - covering number
 - The covering number cov(I) of an ideal I of subsets of X is the smallest number of sets in I whose union is X.
 - critical
 - 1. The critical point κ of an elementary embedding j is the smallest ordinal κ with j(κ) > κ
 - 2. A critical number of a function j is an ordinal κ with j(κ) = κ. This is almost the opposite of the first meaning.
 - CRT
 - The critical point of something
 - CTM
 - Countable transitive model
 - cumulative hierarchy
 - A cumulative hierarchy is a sequence of sets indexed by ordinals that satisfies certain conditions and whose union is used as a model of set theory
 
D
- 𝔡
 - The dominating number of a poset
 - DC
 - The axiom of dependent choice
 - def
 - The set of definable subsets of a set
 - definable
 - A subset of a set is called definable set if it is the collection of elements satisfying a sentence in some given language
 - delta
 - 1. A delta number is an ordinal of the form ωωα
 - 2. A delta system, also called a sunflower, is a collection of sets such that any two distinct sets have intersection X for some fixed set X
 - denumerable
 - countable and infinite
 - Df
 - The set of definable subsets of a set
 - diagonal intersection
 - If is a sequence of subsets of an ordinal , then the diagonal intersection is
 - diamond principle
 - Jensen's diamond principle states that there are sets Aα⊆α for α<ω1 such that for any subset A of ω1 the set of α with A∩α = Aα is stationary in ω1.
 - dom
 - The domain of a function
 - DST
 - Descriptive set theory
 
E
- E
 - E(X) is the membership relation of the set X
 - Easton's theorem
 - Easton's theorem describes the possible behavior of the powerset function on regular cardinals
 - EATS
 - The statement "every Aronszajn tree is special"
 - elementary
 - An elementary embedding is a function preserving all properties describable in the language of set theory
 - epsilon
 - 1. An epsilon number is an ordinal α such that α=ωα
 - 2. Epsilon zero (ε0) is the smallest epsilon number
 - Erdos
 - Erdős
 - 1. Paul Erdős
 - 2. An Erdős cardinal is a large cardinal satisfying a certain partition condition. (They are also called partition cardinals.)
 - 3. The Erdős–Rado theorem extends Ramsey's theorem to infinite cardinals
 - ethereal cardinal
 - An ethereal cardinal is a type of large cardinal similar in strength to subtle cardinals
 - extender
 - An extender is a system of ultrafilters encoding an elementary embedding
 - extendible cardinal
 - A cardinal κ is called extendible if for all η there is a nontrivial elementary embedding of Vκ+η into some Vλ with critical point κ
 - extension
 - 1. If R is a relation on a class then the extension of an element y is the class of x such that xRy
 - 2. An extension of a model is a larger model containing it
 - extensional
 - 1. A relation R on a class is called extensional if every element y of the class is determined by its extension
 - 2. A class is called extensional if the relation ∈ on the class is extensional
 
F
- F
 - An Fσ is a union of a countable number of closed sets
 - Feferman–Schütte ordinal
 - The Feferman–Schütte ordinal Γ0 is in some sense the smallest impredicative ordinal
 - filter
 - A filter is a non-empty subset of a poset that is downward-directed and upwards-closed
 - finite intersection property
 - FIP
 - The finite intersection property, abbreviated FIP, says that the intersection of any finite number of elements of a set is non-empty
 - first
 - 1. A set of first category is the same as a meager set: one that is the union of a countable number of nowhere-dense sets.
 - 2. An ordinal of the first class is a finite ordinal
 - 3. An ordinal of the first kind is a successor ordinal
 - 4. First-order logic allows quantification over elements of a model, but not over subsets
 - Fodor
 - 1. Géza Fodor
 - 2. Fodor's lemma states that a regressive function on a regular uncountable cardinal is constant on a stationary subset.
 - forcing
 - Forcing (mathematics) is a method of adjoining a generic filter G of a poset P to a model of set theory M to obtain a new model M[G]
 - formula
 - Something formed from atomic formulas x=y, x∈y using ∀∃∧∨¬
 - Fraenkel
 - Abraham Fraenkel
 
G
- 𝖌
 - The groupwise density number
 - G
 - 1. A generic ultrafilter
 - 2. A Gδ is a countable intersection of open sets
 - gamma number
 - A gamma number is an ordinal of the form ωα
 - GCH
 - Generalized continuum hypothesis
 - generalized continuum hypothesis
 - The generalized continuum hypothesis states that 2אα = אα+1
 - generic
 - 1. A generic filter of a poset P is a filter that intersects all dense subsets of P that are contained in some model M.
 - 2. A generic extension of a model M is a model M[G] for some generic filter G.
 - gimel
 - 1. The Hebrew letter gimel
 - 2. The gimel function
 - 3. The gimel hypothesis states that
 - global choice
 - The axiom of global choice says there is a well ordering of the class of all sets
 - Godel
 - Gödel
 - 1. Kurt Gödel
 - 2. A Gödel number is a number assigned to a formula
 - 3. The Gödel universe is another name for the constructible universe
 - 4. Gödel's incompleteness theorems show that sufficiently powerful consistent recursively enumerable theories cannot be complete
 - 5. Gödel's completeness theorem states that consistent first-order theories have models
 
H
- 𝔥
 - The distributivity number
 - H
 - Abbreviation for "hereditarily"
 - Hκ
 - H(κ)
 - The set of sets that are hereditarily of cardinality less than κ
 - Hartogs
 - 1. Friedrich Hartogs
 - 2. The Hartogs number of a set X is the least ordinal α such that there is no injection from α into X.
 - Hausdorff
 - 1. Felix Hausdorff
 - 2. A Hausdorff gap is a gap in the ordered set of growth rates of sequences of integers, or in a similar ordered set
 - HC
 - The set of hereditarily countable sets
 - hereditarily
 - If P is a property the a set is hereditarily P if all elements of its transitive closure have property P. Examples: Hereditarily countable set Hereditarily finite set
 - Hessenberg
 - 1. Gerhard Hessenberg
 - 2. The Hessenberg sum and Hessenberg product are commutative operations on ordinals
 - HF
 - The set of hereditarily finite sets
 - Hilbert
 - 1. David Hilbert
 - 2. Hilbert's paradox states that a Hotel with an infinite number of rooms can accommodate extra guests even if it is full
 - HS
 - The class of hereditarily symmetric sets
 - HOD
 - The class of hereditarily ordinal definable sets
 - huge cardinal
 - 1. A huge cardinal is a cardinal number κ such that there exists an elementary embedding j : V → M with critical point κ from V into a transitive inner model M containing all sequences of length j(κ) whose elements are in M
 - 2. An ω-huge cardinal is a large cardinal related to the I1 rank-into-rank axiom
 - hyperarithmetic
 - A hyperarithmetic set is a subset of the natural numbers given by a transfinite extension of the notion of arithmetic set
 - hyperinaccessible
 - hyper-inaccessible
 - 1. "Hyper-inaccessible cardinal" usually means a 1-inaccessible cardinal
 - 2. "Hyper-inaccessible cardinal" sometimes means a cardinal κ that is a κ-inaccessible cardinal
 - 3. "Hyper-inaccessible cardinal" occasionally means a Mahlo cardinal
 - hyper-Mahlo
 - A hyper-Mahlo cardinal is a cardinal κ that is a κ-Mahlo cardinal
 - hyperverse
 - The hyperverse is the set of countable transitive models of ZFC
 
I
- 𝔦
 - The independence number
 - I0, I1, I2, I3
 - The rank-into-rank large cardinal axioms
 - ideal
 - An ideal in the sense of ring theory, usually of a Boolean algebra, especially the Boolean algebra of subsets of a set
 - iff
 - if and only if
 - improper
 - See proper, below.
 - inaccessible cardinal
 - A (weakly or strongly) inaccessible cardinal is a regular uncountable cardinal that is a (weak or strong) limit
 - indecomposable ordinal
 - An indecomposable ordinal is a nonzero ordinal that is not the sum of two smaller ordinals, or equivalently an ordinal of the form ωα or a gamma number.
 - independence number
 - The independence number 𝔦 is the smallest possible cardinality of a maximal independent family of subsets of a countable infinite set
 - indescribable cardinal
 - An indescribable cardinal is a type of large cardinal that cannot be described in terms of smaller ordinals using a certain language
 - individual
 - Something with no elements, either the empty set or an urelement or atom
 - indiscernible
 - A set of indiscernibles is a set I of ordinals such that two increasing finite sequences of elements of I have the same first-order properties
 - inductive
 - A poset is called inductive if every non-empty ordered subset has an upper bound
 - ineffable cardinal
 - An ineffable cardinal is a type of large cardinal related to the generalized Kurepa hypothesis whose consistency strength lies between that of subtle cardinals and remarkable cardinals
 - inner model
 - An inner model is a transitive model of ZF containing all ordinals
 - Int
 - Interior of a subset of a topological space
 - internal
 - An archaic term for extensional (relation)
 
J
- j
 - An elementary embedding
 - J
 - Levels of the Jensen hierarchy
 - Jensen
 - 1. Ronald Jensen
 - 2. The Jensen hierarchy is a variation of the constructible hierarchy
 - 3. Jensen's covering theorem states that if 0# does not exist then every uncountable set of ordinals is contained in a constructible set of the same cardinality
 - Jónsson
 - 1. Bjarni Jónsson
 - 2. A Jónsson cardinal is a large cardinal such that for every function f: [κ]<ω → κ there is a set H of order type κ such that for each n, f restricted to n-element subsets of H omits at least one value in κ.
 - 3. A Jónsson function is a function with the property that, for any subset y of x with the same cardinality as x, the restriction of to has image .
 
K
- Kelley
 - 1. John L. Kelley
 - 2. Morse–Kelley set theory, a set theory with classes
 - KH
 - Kurepa's hypothesis
 - kind
 - Ordinals of the first kind are successor ordinals, and ordinals of the second kind are limit ordinals or 0
 - KM
 - Morse–Kelley set theory
 - Kleene–Brouwer ordering
 - The Kleene–Brouwer ordering is a total order on the finite sequences of ordinals
 - KP
 - Kripke–Platek set theory
 - Kripke
 - 1. Saul Kripke
 - 2. Kripke–Platek set theory consists roughly of the predicative parts of set theory
 - Kurepa
 - 1. Đuro Kurepa
 - 2. The Kurepa hypothesis states that Kurepa trees exist
 - 3. A Kurepa tree is a tree (T, <) of height , each of whose levels is countable, with at least branches
 
L
- L
 - 1. L is the constructible universe, and Lα is the hierarchy of constructible sets
 - 2. Lκλ is an infinitary language
 - large cardinal
 - 1. A large cardinal is type of cardinal whose existence cannot be proved in ZFC.
 - 2. A large large cardinal is a large cardinal that is not compatible with the axiom V=L
 - Laver
 - 1. Richard Laver
 - 2. A Laver function is a function related to supercompact cardinals that takes ordinals to sets
 - Lebesgue
 - 1. Henri Lebesgue
 - 2. Lebesgue measure is a complete translation-invariant measure on the real line
 - LEM
 - Law of the excluded middle
 - Lévy
 - 1. Azriel Lévy
 - 2. The Lévy collapse is a way of destroying cardinals
 - 3. The Lévy hierarchy classifies formulas in terms of the number of alternations of unbounded quantifiers
 - lightface
 - The lightface classes are collections of subsets of an effective Polish space definable by second-order formulas without parameters (as opposed to the boldface hierarchy that allows parameters). They include the arithmetical, hyperarithmetical, and analytical sets
 - limit
 - 1. A (weak) limit cardinal is a cardinal, usually assumed to be nonzero, that is not the successor κ+ of another cardinal κ
 - 2. A strong limit cardinal is a cardinal, usually assumed to be nonzero, larger than the powerset of any smaller cardinal
 - 3. A limit ordinal is an ordinal, usually assumed to be nonzero, that is not the successor α+1 of another ordinal α
 - limited
 - A limited quantifier is the same as a bounded quantifier
 - LM
 - Lebesgue measure
 - local
 - A property of a set x is called local if it has the form ∃δ Vδ⊧ φ(x) for some formula φ
 - LOTS
 - Linearly ordered topological space
 - Löwenheim
 - 1. Leopold Löwenheim
 - 2. The Löwenheim–Skolem theorem states that if a first-order theory has an infinite model then it has a model of any given infinite cardinality
 - LST
 - The language of set theory (with a single binary relation ∈)
 
M
- m
 - 1. A measure
 - 2. A natural number
 - 𝔪
 - The smallest cardinal at which Martin's axiom fails
 - M
 - 1. A model of ZF set theory
 - 2. Mα is an old symbol for the level Lα of the constructible universe
 - MA
 - Martin's axiom
 - MAD
 - Maximally Almost Disjoint
 - Mac Lane
 - 1. Saunders Mac Lane
 - 2. Mac Lane set theory is Zermelo set theory with the axiom of separation restricted to formulas with bounded quantifiers
 - Mahlo
 - 1. Paul Mahlo
 - 2. A Mahlo cardinal is an inaccessible cardinal such that the set of inaccessible cardinals less than it is stationary
 - Martin
 - 1. Donald A. Martin
 - 2. Martin's axiom for a cardinal κ states that for any partial order P satisfying the countable chain condition and any family D of dense sets in P of cardinality at most κ, there is a filter F on P such that F ∩ d is non-empty for every d in D
 - 3. Martin's maximum states that if D is a collection of dense subsets of a notion of forcing that preserves stationary subsets of ω1, then there is a D-generic filter
 - meager
 - meagre
 - A meager set is one that is the union of a countable number of nowhere-dense sets. Also called a set of first category.
 - measure
 - 1. A measure on a σ-algebra of subsets of a set
 - 2. A probability measure on the algebra of all subsets of some set
 - 3. A measure on the algebra of all subsets of a set, taking values 0 and 1
 - measurable cardinal
 - A measurable cardinal is a cardinal number κ such that there exists a κ-additive, non-trivial, 0-1-valued measure on the power set of κ. Most (but not all) authors add the condition that it should be uncountable
 - mice
 - Plural of mouse
 - Milner–Rado paradox
 - The Milner–Rado paradox states that every ordinal number α less than the successor κ+ of some cardinal number κ can be written as the union of sets X1,X2,... where Xn is of order type at most κn for n a positive integer.
 - MK
 - Morse–Kelley set theory
 - MM
 - Martin's maximum
 - morass
 - A morass is a tree with ordinals associated to the nodes and some further structure, satisfying some rather complicated axioms.
 - Morse
 - 1. Anthony Morse
 - 2. Morse–Kelley set theory, a set theory with classes
 - Mostowski
 - 1. Andrzej Mostowski
 - 2. The Mostowski collapse is a transitive class associated to a well founded extensional set-like relation.
 - mouse
 - A certain kind of structure used in constructing core models; see mouse (set theory)
 - multiplicative axiom
 - An old name for the axiom of choice
 
N
- N
 - 1. The set of natural numbers
 - 2. The Baire space ωω
 - naive set theory
 - 1. Naive set theory can mean set theory developed non-rigorously without axioms
 - 2. Naive set theory can mean the inconsistent theory with the axioms of extensionality and comprehension
 - 3. Naive set theory is an introductory book on set theory by Halmos
 - natural
 - The natural sum and natural product of ordinals are the Hessenberg sum and product
 - NCF
 - Near Coherence of Filters
 - non
 - non(I) is the uniformity of I, the smallest cardinality of a subset of X not in the ideal I of subsets of X
 - nonstat
 - nonstationary
 - 1. A subset of an ordinal is called nonstationary if it is not stationary, in other words if its complement contains a club set
 - 2. The nonstationary ideal INS is the ideal of nonstationary sets
 - normal
 - 1. A normal function is a continuous strictly increasing function from ordinals to ordinals
 - 2. A normal filter or normal measure on an ordinal is a filter or measure closed under diagonal intersections
 - 3. The Cantor normal form of an ordinal is its base ω expansion.
 - NS
 - Nonstationary
 - null
 - German for zero, occasionally used in terms such as "aleph null" (aleph zero) or "null set" (empty set)
 - number class
 - The first number class consists of finite ordinals, and the second number class consists of countable ordinals.
 
O
- OCA
 - The open coloring axiom
 - OD
 - The ordinal definable sets
 - Omega logic
 - Ω-logic is a form of logic introduced by Hugh Woodin
 - On
 - The class of all ordinals
 - ordinal
 - 1. An ordinal is the order type of a well-ordered set, usually represented by a von Neumann ordinal, a transitive set well ordered by ∈.
 - 2. An ordinal definable set is a set that can be defined by a first-order formula with ordinals as parameters
 - ot
 - Abbreviation for "order type of"
 
P
- 𝔭
 - The pseudo-intersection number, the smallest cardinality of a family of infinite subsets of ω that has the strong finite intersection property but has no infinite pseudo-intersection.
 - P
 - 1. The powerset function
 - 2. A poset
 - pairing function
 - A pairing function is a bijection from X×X to X for some set X
 - pantachie
 - pantachy
 - A pantachy is a maximal chain of a poset
 - paradox
 - 1. Berry's paradox
 - 2. Burali-Forti's paradox
 - 3. Cantor's paradox
 - 4. Hilbert's paradox
 - 5. Milner–Rado paradox
 - 6. Richard's paradox
 - 7. Russell's paradox
 - 8. Skolem's paradox
 - partial order
 - 1. A set with a transitive antisymmetric relation
 - 2. A set with a transitive symmetric relation
 - partition cardinal
 - An alternative name for an Erdős cardinal
 - PCF
 - Abbreviation for "possible cofinalities", used in PCF theory
 - PD
 - The axiom of projective determinacy
 - perfect set
 - A perfect set is a subset of a topological set equal to its derived set
 - permutation model
 - A permutation model of ZFA is constructed using a group
 - PFA
 - The proper forcing axiom
 - PM
 - The hypothesis that all projective subsets of the reals are Lebesgue measurable
 - po
 - An abbreviation for "partial order" or "poset"
 - poset
 - A set with a partial order
 - Polish space
 - A Polish space is a separable topological space homeomorphic to a complete metric space
 - pow
 - Abbreviation for "power (set)"
 - power
 - "Power" is an archaic term for cardinality
 - power set
 - powerset
 - The powerset or power set of a set is the set of all its subsets
 - projective
 - 1. A projective set is a set that can be obtained from an analytic set by repeatedly taking complements and projections
 - 2. Projective determinacy is an axiom asserting that projective sets are determined
 - proper
 - 1. A proper class is a class that is not a set
 - 2. A proper subset of a set X is a subset not equal to X.
 - 3. A proper forcing is a forcing notion that does not collapse any stationary set
 - 4. The proper forcing axiom asserts that if P is proper and Dα is a dense subset of P for each α<ω1, then there is a filter G P such that Dα ∩ G is nonempty for all α<ω1
 - PSP
 - Perfect subset property
 
Q
- Q
 - The (ordered set of) rational numbers
 - QPD
 - Quasi-projective determinacy
 - quantifier
 - ∀ or ∃
 - Quasi-projective determinacy
 - All sets of reals in L(R) are determined
 
R
- 𝔯
 - The unsplitting number
 - R
 - 1. Rα is an alternative name for the level Vα of the von Neumann hierarchy.
 - 2. The set of real numbers, usually stylized as
 - Ramsey
 - 1. Frank P. Ramsey
 - 2. A Ramsey cardinal is a large cardinal satisfying a certain partition condition
 - ran
 - The range of a function
 - rank
 - 1. The rank of a set is the smallest ordinal greater than the ranks of its elements
 - 2. A rank Vα is the collection of all sets of rank less than α, for an ordinal α
 - 3. rank-into-rank is a type of large cardinal (axiom)
 - reflecting cardinal
 - A reflecting cardinal is a type of large cardinal whose strength lies between being weakly compact and Mahlo
 - reflection principle
 - A reflection principle states that there is a set similar in some way to the universe of all sets
 - regressive
 - A function f from a subset of an ordinal to the ordinal is called regressive if f(α)<α for all α in its domain
 - regular
 - A regular cardinal is one equal to its own cofinality.
 - Reinhardt cardinal
 - A Reinhardt cardinal is a cardinal in a model V of ZF that is the critical point of an elementary embedding of V into itself
 - relation
 - A set or class whose elements are ordered pairs
 - Richard
 - 1. Jules Richard
 - 2. Richard's paradox considers the real number whose nth binary digit is the opposite of the nth digit of the nth definable real number
 - RO
 - The regular open sets of a topological space or poset
 - Rowbottom
 - 1. Frederick Rowbottom
 - 2. A Rowbottom cardinal is a large cardinal satisfying a certain partition condition
 - rud
 - The rudimentary closure of a set
 - rudimentary
 - A rudimentary function is a functions definable by certain elementary operations, used in the construction of the Jensen hierarchy
 - rudimentary set theory
 - See basic set theory.
 - Russell
 - 1. Bertrand Russell
 - 2. Russell's paradox is that the set of all sets not containing themselves is contradictory so cannot exist
 
S
- 𝔰
 - The splitting number
 - Satisfaction relation
 - See ⊨
 - SBH
 - Stationary basis hypothesis
 - SCH
 - Singular cardinal hypothesis
 - SCS
 - Semi-constructive system
 - Scott
 - 1. Dana Scott
 - 2. Scott's trick is a way of coding proper equivalence classes by sets by taking the elements of the class of smallest rank
 - second
 - 1. A set of second category is a set that is not of first category: in other words a set that is not the union of a countable number of nowhere-dense sets.
 - 2. An ordinal of the second class is a countable infinite ordinal
 - 3. An ordinal of the second kind is a limit ordinal or 0
 - 4. Second order logic allows quantification over subsets as well as over elements of a model
 - sentence
 - A formula with no unbound variables
 - separating set
 - 1. A separating set is a set containing a given set and disjoint from another given set
 - 2. A separating set is a set S of functions on a set such that for any two distinct points there is a function in S with different values on them.
 - separative
 - A separative poset is one that can be densely embedded into the poset of nonzero elements of a Boolean algebra.
 - set
 - A collection of distinct objects, considered as an object in its own right.
 - SFIP
 - Strong finite intersection property
 - SH
 - Suslin's hypothesis
 - Shelah
 - 1. Saharon Shelah
 - 2. A Shelah cardinal is a large cardinal that is the critical point of an elementary embedding satisfying certain conditions
 - shrewd cardinal
 - A shrewd cardinal is a type of large cardinal generalizing indecribable cardinals to transfinite levels
 - Sierpinski
 - Sierpiński
 - 1. Wacław Sierpiński
 - 2. A Sierpiński set is an uncountable subset of a real vector space whose intersection with every measure-zero set is countable
 - Silver
 - 1. Jack Silver
 - 2. The Silver indiscernibles form a class I of ordinals such that I∩Lκ is a set of indiscernibles for Lκ for every uncountable cardinal κ
 - singular
 - 1. A singular cardinal is one that is not regular
 - 2. The singular cardinal hypothesis states that if κ is any singular strong limit cardinal, then 2κ = κ+.
 - SIS
 - Semi-intuitionistic system
 - Skolem
 - 1. Thoralf Skolem
 - 2. Skolem's paradox states that if ZFC is consistent there are countable models of it
 - 3. A Skolem function is a function whose value is something with a given property if anything with that property exists
 - 4. The Skolem hull of a model is its closure under Skolem functions
 - small
 - A small large cardinal axiom is a large cardinal axiom consistent with the axiom V=L
 - SOCA
 - Semi open coloring axiom
 - Solovay
 - 1. Robert M. Solovay
 - 2. The Solovay model is a model of ZF in which every set of reals is measurable
 - special
 - A special Aronszajn tree is one with an order preserving map to the rationals
 - square
 - The square principle is a combinatorial principle holding in the constructible universe and some other inner models
 - standard model
 - A model of set theory where the relation ∈ is the same as the usual one.
 - stationary set
 - A stationary set is a subset of an ordinal intersecting every club set
 - strong
 - 1. The strong finite intersection property says that the intersection of any finite number of elements of a set is infinite
 - 2. A strong cardinal is a cardinal κ such that if λ is any ordinal, there is an elementary embedding with critical point κ from the universe into a transitive inner model containing all elements of Vλ
 - 3. A strong limit cardinal is a (usually nonzero) cardinal that is larger than the powerset of any smaller cardinal
 - strongly
 - 1. A strongly inaccessible cardinal is a regular strong limit cardinal
 - 2. A strongly Mahlo cardinal is a strongly inaccessible cardinal such that the set of strongly inaccessible cardinals below it is stationary
 - 3. A strongly compact cardinal is a cardinal κ such that every κ-complete filter can be extended to a κ complete ultrafilter
 - subtle cardinal
 - A subtle cardinal is a type of large cardinal closely related to ethereal cardinals
 - successor
 - 1. A successor cardinal is the smallest cardinal larger than some given cardinal
 - 2. A successor ordinal is the smallest ordinal larger than some given ordinal
 - such that
 - A condition used in the definition of a mathematical object
 - sunflower
 - A sunflower, also called a delta system, is a collection of sets such that any two distinct sets have intersection X for some fixed set X
 - Souslin
 - Suslin
 - 1. Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin (sometimes written Souslin)
 - 2. A Suslin algebra is a Boolean algebra that is complete, atomless, countably distributive, and satisfies the countable chain condition
 - 3. A Suslin cardinal is a cardinal λ such that there exists a set P ⊂ 2ω such that P is λ-Suslin but P is not λ'-Suslin for any λ' < λ.
 - 4. The Suslin hypothesis says that Suslin lines do not exist
 - 5. A Suslin line is a complete dense unbounded totally ordered set satisfying the countable chain condition
 - 6. The Suslin number is the supremum of the cardinalities of families of disjoint open non-empty sets
 - 7. The Suslin operation, usually denoted by A, is an operation that constructs a set from a Suslin scheme
 - 8. The Suslin problem asks whether Suslin lines exist
 - 9. The Suslin property states that there is no uncountable family of pairwise disjoint non-empty open subsets
 - 10. A Suslin representation of a set of reals is a tree whose projection is that set of reals
 - 11. A Suslin scheme is a function with domain the finite sequences of positive integers
 - 12. A Suslin set is a set that is the image of a tree under a certain projection
 - 13. A Suslin space is the image of a Polish space under a continuous mapping
 - 14. A Suslin subset is a subset that is the image of a tree under a certain projection
 - 15. The Suslin theorem about analytic sets states that a set that is analytic and coanalytic is Borel
 - 16. A Suslin tree is a tree of height ω1 such that every branch and every antichain is at most countable.
 - supercompact
 - A supercompact cardinal is an uncountable cardinal κ such that for every A such that Card(A) ≥ κ there exists a normal measure over [A] κ.
 - super transitive
 - supertransitive
 - A supertransitive set is a transitive set that contains all subsets of all its elements
 - symmetric model
 - A symmetric model is a model of ZF (without the axiom of choice) constructed using a group action on a forcing poset
 
T
- 𝔱
 - The tower number
 - T
 - A tree
 - tall cardinal
 - A tall cardinal is a type of large cardinal that is the critical point of a certain sort of elementary embedding
 - Tarski
 - 1. Alfred Tarski
 - 2. Tarski's theorem states that the axiom of choice is equivalent to the existence of a bijection from X to X×X for all infinite sets X
 - TC
 - The transitive closure of a set
 - total order
 - A total order is a relation that is transitive and antisymmetric such that any two elements are comparable
 - totally indescribable
 - A totally indescribable cardinal is a cardinal that is Πm
n-indescribable for all m,n - transfinite
 - 1. An infinite ordinal
 - 2. Transfinite induction is induction over ordinals
 - transitive
 - 1. A transitive relation
 - 2. The transitive closure of a set is the smallest transitive set containing it.
 - 3. A transitive set or class is a set or class such that the membership relation is transitive on it.
 - 4. A transitive model is a model of set theory that is transitive and has the usual membership relation
 - tree
 - 1. A tree is a partially ordered set (T, <) such that for each t ∈ T, the set {s ∈ T : s < t} is well-ordered by the relation <
 - 2. A tree is a collection of finite sequences such that every prefix of a sequence in the collection also belongs to the collection.
 - 3. A cardinal κ has the tree property if there are no κ-Aronszajn trees
 - type class
 - A type class or class of types is the class of all order types of a given cardinality, up to order-equivalence.
 
U
- 𝔲
 - The ultrafilter number, the minimum possible cardinality of an ultrafilter base
 - Ulam
 - 1. Stanislaw Ulam
 - 2. An Ulam matrix is a collection of subsets of a cardinal indexed by pairs of ordinals, that satisfies certain properties.
 - Ult
 - An ultrapower or ultraproduct
 - ultrafilter
 - 1. A maximal filter
 - 2. The ultrafilter number 𝔲 is the minimum possible cardinality of an ultrafilter base
 - ultrapower
 - An ultraproduct in which all factors are equal
 - ultraproduct
 - An ultraproduct is the quotient of a product of models by a certain equivalence relation
 - unfoldable cardinal
 - An unfoldable cardinal a cardinal κ such that for every ordinal λ and every transitive model M of cardinality κ of ZFC-minus-power set such that κ is in M and M contains all its sequences of length less than κ, there is a non-trivial elementary embedding j of M into a transitive model with the critical point of j being κ and j(κ) ≥ λ.
 - uniformity
 - The uniformity non(I) of I is the smallest cardinality of a subset of X not in the ideal I of subsets of X
 - uniformization
 - Uniformization is a weak form of the axiom of choice, giving cross sections for special subsets of a product of two Polish spaces
 - universal
 - universe
 - 1. The universal class, or universe, is the class of all sets.
 - A universal quantifier is the quantifier "for all", usually written ∀
 - urelement
 - An urelement is something that is not a set but allowed to be an element of a set
 
V
- V
 - V is the universe of all sets, and the sets Vα form the Von Neumann hierarchy
 - V=L
 - The axiom of constructibility
 - Veblen
 - 1. Oswald Veblen
 - 2. The Veblen hierarchy is a family of ordinal valued functions, special cases of which are called Veblen functions.
 - von Neumann
 - 1. John von Neumann
 - 2. A von Neumann ordinal is an ordinal encoded as the union of all smaller (von Neumann) ordinals
 - 3. The von Neumann hierarchy is a cumulative hierarchy Vα with Vα+1 the powerset of Vα.
 - Vopenka
 - Vopěnka
 - 1. Petr Vopěnka
 - 2. Vopěnka's principle states that for every proper class of binary relations there is one elementarily embeddable into another
 - 3. A Vopěnka cardinal is an inaccessible cardinal κ such that and Vopěnka's principle holds for Vκ
 
W
- weakly
 - 1. A weakly inaccessible cardinal is a regular weak limit cardinal
 - 2. A weakly compact cardinal is a cardinal κ (usually also assumed to be inaccessible) such that the infinitary language Lκ,κ satisfies the weak compactness theorem
 - 3. A weakly Mahlo cardinal is a cardinal κ that is weakly inaccessible and such that the set of weakly inaccessible cardinals less than κ is stationary in κ
 - well founded
 - A relation is called well founded if every non-empty subset has a minimal element
 - well ordering
 - A well ordering is a well founded relation, usually also assumed to be a total order
 - Wf
 - The class of well-founded sets, which is the same as the class of all sets if one assumes the axiom of foundation
 - Woodin
 - 1. Hugh Woodin
 - 2. A Woodin cardinal is a type of large cardinal that is the critical point of a certain sort of elementary embedding, closely related to the axiom of projective determinacy
 
XYZ
- Z
 - Zermelo set theory without the axiom of choice
 - ZC
 - Zermelo set theory with the axiom of choice
 - Zermelo
 - 1. Ernst Zermelo
 - 2. Zermelo−Fraenkel set theory is the standard system of axioms for set theory
 - 3. Zermelo set theory is similar to the usual Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory, but without the axioms of replacement and foundation
 - 4. Zermelo's well-ordering theorem states that every set can be well ordered
 - ZF
 - Zermelo−Fraenkel set theory without the axiom of choice
 - ZFA
 - Zermelo−Fraenkel set theory with atoms
 - ZFC
 - Zermelo−Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice
 - ZF-P
 - Zermelo−Fraenkel set theory without the axiom of choice or the powerset axiom
 - Zorn
 - 1. Max Zorn
 - 2. Zorn's lemma states that if every chain of a non-empty poset has an upper bound then the poset has a maximal element
 
See also
References
- ↑ P. Aczel, The Type Theoretic Interpretation of Constructive Set Theory (1978)
 
- Jech, Thomas (2003). Set Theory. Springer Monographs in Mathematics (Third Millennium ed.). Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-44085-7. Zbl 1007.03002.
 
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