1 - Preliminaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
In one sense, set theory is the study of mathematics using the tools of mathematics. After millennia of doing mathematics, mathematicians started trying to write down the rules of the game. Since mathematics had already fanned out into many subareas, each with its own terminology and concerns, the first task was to find a reasonable common language. It turns out that everything mathematicians do can be reduced to statements about sets, equality and membership. These three concepts are so fundamental that we cannot define them; we can only describe them. About equality alone, there is little to say other than “two things are equal if and only if they are the same thing.” Describing sets and membership has been trickier. After several decades and some false starts, mathematicians came up with a system of laws that reflected their intuition about sets, equality and membership, at least the intuition that they had built up so far. Most importantly, all of the theorems of mathematics that were known at the time could be derived from just these laws. In this context, it is common to refer to laws as axioms, and to this particular system as Zermelo–Fraenkel Set Theory with the Axiom of Choice, or ZFC. In the first unit of the course, through Chapter 4, we examine this system and get some practice using it to build up the theory of infinite numbers.
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- A Course on Set Theory , pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011