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Universe
A universe
is a nonempty set satisfying the following axioms:
- If
and
, then
.
- If
, then
.
- If
, then the power set
.
- If
is a family of elements of
, then
.
From these axioms, one can deduce the following properties:
- If
, then
.
- If
is a subset
of
, then
.
- If
, then the ordered pair
is in
.
- If
, then
and
are in
.
- If
is a family of elements of
, then the product
is in
.
- If
, then the cardinality
of
is strictly
less than
the cardinality of
. In particular,
.
In order for uncountable universes to exist, it is necessary to adopt an extra axiom for set theory. This is usually phrased as:
This axiom cannot be proven using the axioms ZFC. But it seems (according to Bourbaki) that it probably cannot be proven not to lead to a contradiction.One usually also assumes
This axiom does not affect the consistency of ZFC, that is, ZFC is consistent if and only if ZFC with this axiom added is consistent. This is also known as the axiom of foundation, and it is often included with ZFC. If it is not accepted, then one can for all practical purposes restrict oneself to working within the class of artinian sets.Finally, one must be careful when using relations within universes; the details are too technical for Bourbaki to work out (!), but see the appendix to Exposé 1 of [SGA4] for more detail.
The standard reference for universes is [SGA4].
Bibliography
- SGA4
- Grothendieck et al. Seminaires en Geometrie Algebrique 4, Tome 1, Exposé 1 (or the appendix to Exposé 1, by N. Bourbaki for more detail and a large number of results there described as ``ne pouvant servir à rien''). SGA4 is available on the Web. (It is in French.)