Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Contributors to Sets for Mathematics
- 1 Abstract Sets and Mappings
- 2 Sums, Monomorphisms, and Parts
- 3 Finite Inverse Limits
- 4 Colimits, Epimorphisms, and the Axiom of Choice
- 5 Mapping Sets and Exponentials
- 6 Summary of the Axioms and an Example of Variable Sets
- 7 Consequences and Uses of Exponentials
- 8 More on Power Sets
- 9 Introduction to Variable Sets
- 10 Models of Additional Variation
- Appendixes
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Introduction to Variable Sets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Contributors to Sets for Mathematics
- 1 Abstract Sets and Mappings
- 2 Sums, Monomorphisms, and Parts
- 3 Finite Inverse Limits
- 4 Colimits, Epimorphisms, and the Axiom of Choice
- 5 Mapping Sets and Exponentials
- 6 Summary of the Axioms and an Example of Variable Sets
- 7 Consequences and Uses of Exponentials
- 8 More on Power Sets
- 9 Introduction to Variable Sets
- 10 Models of Additional Variation
- Appendixes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Axiom of Infinity: Number Theory
Recall that we denote by S the category of (abstract, discrete, constant) sets and arbitrary maps between them that we have studied till now. In the various branches of mathematics (such as mechanics, geometry, analysis, number theory, logic) there arise many different categories χ of (not necessarily discrete, variable) sets and respectful maps between them. The relation between S and the χ's is (at least) threefold:
(0) S is “case zero” of an χ in that in general the sets in χ have some sort of structure such as glue, motion and so on, but in S this structure is reduced to nothing. However, the general X often has a functor determining the mere number (Cantor) |X| of each such emergent aggregate X.
(1) A great many of the mathematical properties of such a category χ of variable sets are the same or similar to properties of the category S of constant sets. Thus, a thorough knowledge of the properties of S, together with some categorical wisdom, can be indispensable in dealing with problems of analysis, combinatorics, and so forth. The main common properties include the concepts of function spaces XT and of power sets P(X).
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- Sets for Mathematics , pp. 154 - 166Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003