What I want to know is how N is defined. — Qwex
via the Peano axioms, in which N is a collection but not a set — fishfry
In work on Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, the notion of class is informal, whereas other set theories, such as von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel set theory, axiomatize the notion of "proper class", e.g., as entities that are not members of another entity.
A class that is not a set (informally in Zermelo–Fraenkel) is called a proper class, and a class that is a set is sometimes called a small class. For instance, the class of all ordinal numbers, and the class of all sets, are proper classes in many formal systems. — Wikipedia on class versus set
In set theory, an ordinal number, or ordinal, is one generalization of the concept of a natural number that is used to describe a way to arrange a (possibly infinite) collection of objects in order, one after another. Any finite collection of objects can be put in order just by the process of counting: labeling the objects with distinct natural numbers. Ordinal numbers are thus the "labels" needed to arrange collections of objects in order. — Wikipedia on ordinal numbers
Sets are those things given by the axioms you use, and it results that the notion of set becomes relative to the theory being considered. Something may be a set in one theory, but not in others. “Collection” is, as far as I can imagine, an informal word for aggregate or amount of things, standard things like pebbles and cats, which of course can be represented by sets, but have nothing to do with abstract mathematics. — Quora answer on sets versus collections
I understand you can count your fingers, 1 - 4, but what says a finger is a 1 and not crossed fingers? The 'whole' of the finger? — Qwex
I understand:
Natural: 1, 2, 3...
Whole: 0, 1, 2...
Integer: -1, 0, 1...
Rational: m/n
Irrational: x - m/n
Real: applicable to number line.
What I want to know is how N is defined.
Is there special use of the word 'is'? Natural numbers are N, is incomplete.
A. 1 through 9, are numbers, why?
B. Why does the number system progress, beginning from the left, proceding to the right?
C. Is human number just a tool?
I'm just getting into mathematics...
Sorry for having an intricate view - I'm not trying to distract. My primary question is (A).
Further Edits:
A shadow-argument:
I understand you can count your fingers, 1 - 4, but what says a finger is a 1 and not crossed fingers? The 'whole' of the finger?
In which case it's not a single, there's an organism involved(such as under the skin of the finger), and thus, a finger is not a 1.
I understand 1 is a concept but mathmatically, 1 is a point.
Perhaps, to point at your finger you'll use the number 1 but to define it numerically it's a different number. — Qwex
I tried to look up this concept but the wikipedia pages for peano axioms and natural number do not seem to mention this subtlety. I assume that "a collection but not a set" means that N cannot be an element of another set? — alcontali
There is also the concept of "proper class": — alcontali
In work on Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, the notion of class is informal, whereas other set theories, such as von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel set theory, axiomatize the notion of "proper class", e.g., as entities that are not members of another entity. — alcontali
A class that is not a set (informally in Zermelo–Fraenkel) is called a proper class, and a class that is a set is sometimes called a small class. For instance, the class of all ordinal numbers, and the class of all sets, are proper classes in many formal systems.
— Wikipedia on class versus set — alcontali
So, according to the above, the ordinal numbers are not a set but a proper class. — alcontali
In set theory, an ordinal number, or ordinal, is one generalization of the concept of a natural number that is used to describe a way to arrange a (possibly infinite) collection of objects in order, one after another. Any finite collection of objects can be put in order just by the process of counting: labeling the objects with distinct natural numbers. Ordinal numbers are thus the "labels" needed to arrange collections of objects in order.
— Wikipedia on ordinal numbers — alcontali
So, according to the above, ordinal numbers are not a set in set theory. I couldn't find a reference to the idea of distinguishing between natural numbers and ordinal numbers in Peano arithmetic (PA). It even looks like expressing this distinction requires the full power of the machinery in set theory, such as, for example, by defining Von Neumann ordinals. — alcontali
Therefore, I am a bit surprised that PA would even be able to introduce this type of subtlety through its axioms. — alcontali
(Or maybe it actually does, but then implicitly/unexpectedly.) — alcontali
By the way, I also found this remark on the subject:
Sets are those things given by the axioms you use, and it results that the notion of set becomes relative to the theory being considered. Something may be a set in one theory, but not in others. “Collection” is, as far as I can imagine, an informal word for aggregate or amount of things, standard things like pebbles and cats, which of course can be represented by sets, but have nothing to do with abstract mathematics.
— Quora answer on sets versus collections — alcontali
The answer above even seems to object to using the term "collection" in mathematics, because the term does not naturally emerge from any theory's axioms. — alcontali
That's the famous Burali-Forti paradox, that the collection of ordinals can't be a set. — fishfry
It is named after Cesare Burali-Forti, who in 1897 published a paper proving a theorem which, unknown to him, contradicted a previously proved result by Cantor. — Wikipedia on Burali-Forti
Yes, you can't define the ordinals in PA because you can't get to the first transfinite ordinal ω by successors. You have to take a limit; or what amounts to the same thing, you have to consider the completed set of natural numbers. That in fact is the definition of ω. — fishfry
The study of non-well-founded sets was initiated by Dmitry Mirimanoff in a series of papers between 1917 and 1920, in which he formulated the distinction between well-founded and non-well-founded sets. — Wikipedia on non-well-foundedness
Wow. That is very interesting! — alcontali
It is named after Cesare Burali-Forti, who in 1897 published a paper proving a theorem which, unknown to him, contradicted a previously proved result by Cantor.
— Wikipedia on Burali-Forti — alcontali
Yes, I should probably not have used the symbol ℕN (above) to designate the ordinal ω. I already sensed this because Wikipedia explicitly stays clear of doing that: — alcontali
So, in this context, the subtlety is that ℕN = { 0, 1, 2, ... } is not complete, while ω = { 0, 1, 2, ..., ω } is complete but then rests on something ultimately contradictory, i.e. a non-well-founded set expression of the type A = { B, A } which is then equivalent with A = { B, { B, A } } = { B, { B, { B, { B, A } } } } and so on, ad nauseam. — alcontali
It looks like there is a strong (but unexpected) link between and Cesare Burali-Forti's work and what Dmitry Mirimanoff pointed out:
The study of non-well-founded sets was initiated by Dmitry Mirimanoff in a series of papers between 1917 and 1920, in which he formulated the distinction between well-founded and non-well-founded sets.
— Wikipedia on non-well-foundedness — alcontali
So, this result is understandable if we keep the subtlety in mind that ℕN is not materialized while Ω is materialized. The act of materializing ℕN substantially changes its nature. The work of Burali-Forti is quite interesting. In my opinion, it is surprising and even intriguing! — alcontali
In fact PA is equivalent, as a theory, to ZF minus infinity; that is, ZF with the negation of the axiom of infinity. — fishfry
The axiom of infinity allows us to take the "output of the completed induction," — fishfry
Relational algebra, first created by Edgar F. Codd while at IBM, is a family of algebras with a well-founded semantics used for modelling the data stored in relational databases, and defining queries on it. — Wikipedia on relational algebra
Your use of complete is nonstandard and I don't know what you mean. — fishfry
Here, the list [0..] represents , x^2>3 represents the predicate, and 2*x represents the output expression. List comprehensions give results in a defined order (unlike the members of sets); and list comprehensions may generate the members of a list in order, rather than produce the entirety of the list thus allowing, for example, the previous Haskell definition of the members of an infinite list. — Wikipedia about using virtual constructs that represent the infinite list of natural numbers
So Burali-Forti is a theorem that follows from the axioms of ZF: that the class of ordinals can not be a set. And non well-founded set theory is a thing, but an obscure thing. These two ideas are NOT at some opposite ends of a pendulum or related to one another at all. You are wrong about any important connection or insight here. — fishfry
There are no infinite downward chains of membership. — fishfry
Therefore if the class of ordinals were a set we could take its union to get another ordinal that must be a member of itself. That violates regularity, so there can be no set of ordinals. — fishfry
I would like to discuss this because it is absolutely not self-evident to me that two sets of different rules, i.e. PA versus ZF minus infinity, would be completely equivalent. The rules do not even look like each other. Just look at the axioms. They are simply different. Still, if their equivalence is provable, then I would consider that to be an amazing result. — alcontali
In fact, in that case, it should be possible to take the axioms of PA, push them through some kind of algebraic transformation process, and then end up with ZF minus infinity. I cannot imagine what this transformation process could look like. — alcontali
The axiom of infinity allows us to take the "output of the completed induction,"
— fishfry
That is exactly what I mean by "materializing". — alcontali
The reason why I used this term, is because this is the term used when you fully calculate and store the output of a view formula in relational databases, instead of keeping it around as a merely virtual construct. So, taking the "output of the completed induction" is called "materializing" in that context. — alcontali
I just accidentally used a term (materialized view) en provenance from another domain. — alcontali
In fact, it is not a completely different domain, because relational algebra is a downstream domain from ZF set theory. It completely rests on standard set theory. It is only much closer to practical applications:
Relational algebra, first created by Edgar F. Codd while at IBM, is a family of algebras with a well-founded semantics used for modelling the data stored in relational databases, and defining queries on it.
— Wikipedia on relational algebra — alcontali
Your use of complete is nonstandard and I don't know what you mean.
— fishfry
I wasn't aware of the fact that the notation, N = { 0, 1, 2, ... }, is considered complete in set theory (through the axiom of infinity). — alcontali
(It is obviously not considered complete in PA.) — alcontali
So, yes, my use of the term "complete" is not standard in set builder notation in reference to ZF (but not in reference to ZF minus infinity). — alcontali
These things are extremely subtle. — alcontali
It depends on whether the theory in the context of which it is used, has an axiom that can "take the output of the completed induction", i.e. "materialize" it in relational-algebra lingo. — alcontali
It is also very related to the concept of list comprehension where a similar problem occurs. You can create the list of natural numbers as a virtual construct, but you cannot "materialize" it, because that will cause your system to run out of memory. — alcontali
Here, the list [0..] represents ℕN , x^2>3 represents the predicate, and 2*x represents the output expression. List comprehensions give results in a defined order (unlike the members of sets); and list comprehensions may generate the members of a list in order, rather than produce the entirety of the list thus allowing, for example, the previous Haskell definition of the members of an infinite list.
— Wikipedia about using virtual constructs that represent the infinite list of natural numbers — alcontali
So Burali-Forti is a theorem that follows from the axioms of ZF: that the class of ordinals can not be a set. — alcontali
And non well-founded set theory is a thing, but an obscure thing. These two ideas are NOT at some opposite ends of a pendulum or related to one another at all. You are wrong about any important connection or insight here.
— fishfry
if Ω is the set of ordinals but Ω is also itself an ordinal, then this situation will result in Ω being a set that contains itself, and therefore, result in a set that is not well-founded. — alcontali
There are no infinite downward chains of membership.
— fishfry
Yes, but that is exactly what would happen if Ω is the set of ordinals but Ω is also itself an ordinal. That is in my impression another reason why Ω cannot be termed a set but must be considered a proper class. — alcontali
You have admirable patience. — jgill
Thank goodness run-of-the-mill mathematics avoids all this. — jgill
The technical condition is that PA and ZF-infinity (read "ZF minus infinity") are bi-interpretable. — fishfry
the output of the completed induction ... There is no such term of art in set theory. — fishfry
Completeness of the real numbers
Not to be confused with Completeness (logic).
There are many equivalent forms of completeness, the most prominent being Dedekind completeness and Cauchy completeness (completeness as a metric space). — Completeness of the real numbers
It's not really analogous to an axiomatic system IMO but sort of works as a vague metaphor. — fishfry
So is materializing the same as completing? — fishfry
Of course the natural numbers with the usual metric (absolute arithmetic difference) is Cauchy-complete. (Tricky. Why?) — fishfry
A is perfectly "complete" in your sense, it contains the conclusions of all its axioms. — fishfry
You can't say the axiom of infinity completed it using your made-up definition, when it's NOT complete by everyone's standard definition. — fishfry
To sum up, all I can see is that you're saying that PA is complete with respect to the axioms of PA, and ZF is complete with respect to the axioms of ZF, and ZFC is complete wrt the axioms of ZFC, and so forth. — fishfry
Beg to differ. Functional analysis uses the Hahn-Banach theorem, which is equivalent to a weak form of the axiom of choice — fishfry
jgill you have a university affiliation by any chance? — fishfry
Bi-interpretability looks like an interesting subject, but unfortunately the Wikipedia page does not elaborate PA versus ZF-infinity as an example. — alcontali
Well, you did use the term "complete" in the sense of induction-complete. I clearly used it in the same way, and then you suddenly backtrack to claiming that induction-complete would be "no such term of art in set theory". — alcontali
So is materializing the same as completing?
— fishfry
It is used as a term for induction-completing (A term you actually introduced by yourself yourself). — alcontali
In fact, I never used the term induction-complete or induction-completed before. I only used it because you used it first. I tend to use the term "materialized" instead of induction-completed. Furthermore, it is probably better not to further overload the term 'complete' with additional meanings. — alcontali
Numbers are names for quantities. — creativesoul
I don't know where there would be an actual mathematical formulation of "N is a proper class as far as PA is concerned." — GrandMinnow
Indeed, every consistent theory has a model whose universe is a set. — GrandMinnow
In PA the extension of the unary predicate "n is a natural number" is the collection we call NN. — fishfry
In other words PA is a model of ZF-infinity. — fishfry
The only way to get a model of PA is to wave your hands and say the magic words, "Axiom of infinity!" — fishfry
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