A system of axiomatic set theory. Part III. Infinity and enumerability. Analysis
- 1 June 1942
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Symbolic Logic
- Vol. 7 (2) , 65-89
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2266303
Abstract
The foundation of analysis does not require the full generality of set theory but can be accomplished within a more restricted frame. Just as for number theory we need not introduce a set of all finite ordinals but only a class of all finite ordinals, all sets which occur being finite, so likewise for analysis we need not have a set of all real numbers but only a class of them, and the sets with which we have to deal are either finite or enumerable. We begin with the definitions of infinity and enumerability and with some consideration of these concepts on the basis of the axioms I—III, IV, V a, V b, which, as we shall see later, are sufficient for general set theory. Let us recall that the axioms I—III and V a suffice for establishing number theory, in particular for the iteration theorem, and for the theorems on finiteness.Keywords
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