I'm not a set theorist, but I have some thoughts.
I haven't seen articles before that give a layman's explanation of forcing and of axioms for proving CH. So I appreciate that.
I have my own question. I kinda got the idea behind the explanation of the filter, but I wonder if this is correct:
That filter proves the existence of a certain real number. Then we use other filters to prove the existence of other real numbers. By doing that some uncountable number of ways, we prove that there are sets of real numbers that have cardinality between the cardinality of the set of natural numbers and the cardinality of the power set of the set of natural numbers. Is that correct?
(IMPORTANT. In this post, I take "ZF is consistent" as a background assumption. For example "ZFC is consistent" in this post means "If ZF is consistent then ZFC is consistent".)
'AC' stands for the axiom of choice.
'CH' stands for the continuum hypotheis.
'GCH' stands for the generalized continuum hypothesis.
'ZFC'stands for ZF+AC.
I know nothing about forcing other than this:
(1) Cohen used forcing to prove:
ZF+~AC.
ZFC+~CH is consistent. So, a fortiori, ZFC+~GCH is consistent.
(2) Forcing involves ultrafilters and/or Boolean algebra.
Re (1), Godel had previously proved:
ZFC is consistent. [*]
ZFC+GCH is consistent. So, a fortiori, ZFC+CH is consistent.
Godel did it with the notion of the constructible universe.
Combining Godel and Cohen, we get:
AC is independent from ZF.
CH is independent from ZF.
GCH is independent from ZF.
[*] But what about Godel's second incompleteness theorem that entails "Set theory does not prove its own consistency"? Well, actually the second incompletess doesn't entail that. The second incompleteness theorem does entail, "If set theory is consistent then set theory does not prove set theory is consistent". And, since I put "ZF is consistent" as a blanket assumption for this post, "ZFC is consistent" in this post, stands for "If ZF is consistent then ZFC is consistent". That qualification applies, mutatis mutandis, to both the Cohen theorems and both the Godel theorems above.
FOR REFERENCE:
df. A set of sentences S is consistent iff S does not prove a contradiction.
df. A sentence P is independent from a set of sentences S iff (S does not prove P and S does not prove ~P).
th. A sentence P is independent from a set of sentences S iff (S+P is consistent and S+~P is consistent.
th. If a set of sentences S is consistent, then there is a model in which every sentence in S is true (this is Godel's completeness theorem).
So:
To prove "ZFC is consistent", it suffices to prove there is a model of ZFC. But "ZF is consistent" entails "ZF has a model". So it suffices to prove that "ZF has a model" implies "ZFC has a model".
To prove "ZFC+GCH is consistent", it suffices to prove there is a model of ZFC+GCH. But "ZF is consistent" entails "ZF has a model", which, Godel proved, entails "ZFC has a model". So it suffices to prove that "ZFC has a model" implies "ZFC+GCH has a model".
To prove "ZF+~AC is consistent", it suffices to prove there is a model of ZF+~AC. But "ZF is consistent" entails "ZF has a model". So it suffices to prove that "ZF has a model" implies "ZF+~AC has a model".
To prove "ZF+~CH is consistent", it suffices to prove there is a model of ZF+~CH. But "ZF is consistent" entails "ZF has a model". So it suffices to prove that "ZF has a model" implies "ZF+~CH has a model".
Those are examples of relative consistency. "If theory T is consistent, then theory Y is consistent".
Some years after Godel's results just mentioned, Sierpenski proved that ZF+GCH proves ZFC. So:
Proving "ZF+GCH is consistent", a fortiori, proves "ZFC is consistent".
Proving "ZF+~AC is consistent", a fortiori, proves "ZF+~AC+~GCH", which, a fortiori, proves "ZF+~GCH is consistent". So, "ZF+~AC is consistent" proves "ZF+~GCH is consistent".
BACKGROUND:
What is the axiom of choice?
What is the continuum hypotheis?
What is the generalized continuum hypothesis?
df. 0 = the empty set.
df. PS = the set of subsets of S.
df. Y\Z = the set whose members are all and only those members of Y that are not members of Z.
C (the axiom of choice) is the statement:
"For every S, there is a function on the PS\{0} such that for every x in PS\{0}, f(x) e x". We call such an f "a choice function for S".
To visualize the above:
Imagine a nation made up of provinces (and possibly there are infinitely many provinces). From each province we can choose a representative who is a resident of that province.
If S is finite, without the axiom of choice, by a trivial induction on the cardinality of S, we prove there is a choice function for S, so we don't need the axiom of choice to prove there is a choice function for S.
"For every S, there is a function on the PS\{0} such that for every x in PS\{0}, f(x) e x".
The axiom of choice is equivalent with a number of other theorems, especially "Every S has a well ordering" and "Every S is equinumerous with an ordinal".
df. S^x = the set of funtions from x into S.
df. x and y are equinumerous iff there is a bijection between x and y.
df. card(S) = the least ordinal k such that S and k are equinumerous.
df. for ordinals, x < y iff x e y.
df. w = the set of natural numbers
df. R = the set of real numbers
th. card(R) = card(Pw) = card(2^w)
th. There is no surjection from S onto PS. (Cantor's theorem)
th. card(w) < card(R)
CH is the statement:
"There is no S such that card(w) < card(S) < card(R)".
GCH is the statement:
"If X is infinite, then there is no S such that card(X) < card(S) < card(PX).
Cantor failed to prove CH. Hilbert wanted somebody to prove it. Godel proved that we can't disprove GCH, a foritori that we can't disprove CH. Cohen proved that we can't disprove ZFC+~CH, so, a fortiori, we can't dispove ZFC+~GCH.
So some set theorists, who feel that ~CH fits their concept of 'set' have been trying to discover a set theoretic statement that is even more convincingly true to their concept of 'set' and that proves ~CH. Other set theorists, who feel that CH fits their concept of 'set' have been trying to discover a set theoretic statement that is even more convincingly true to their concept of 'set' and that proves CH.
FOR REFERENCE:
Z is basic infinitistic set theory (first order logic with identity, extensionality, schema of separation, pairing, union, power, infinity, regularity). ZF is Z with the axiom schema of replacement added.
The axiom schema of replacement is the statement [I'm simplifying]:
"If R is a function class, then, for every S, there is the T whose members are all and only those y such that there is an x in S such that <x y> in R."
R is a proper class. It is a proper class of ordered pairs. The axiom of replacement is: If R is functional (i.e. if <x y> in R and <x z> in R, then y=z), then for any set S, there exists the set T that is the image of S by R. I.e., if you have a set S, and a functional relation, then the "range" of that relation restricted from the domain S is a set.
That mentions proper a proper class, though Z proves ~Ex x is a proper class. So the actual axiom schema of replacement is a set of axioms, with each axiom mentioning a formula instead of a proper class. The formula "carves out" the proper class.