Von Neumann cardinal assignment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The von Neumann cardinal assignment is a cardinal assignment which uses ordinal numbers. For a well-ordered set U, we define its cardinal number to be the smallest ordinal number equinumerous to U. More precisely,

|U| = \mathrm{card}(U) = \inf \{ \alpha \in ON \ |\ \alpha =_c U \} ,

where ON is the class of ordinals. This ordinal is also called the initial ordinal of the cardinal.

That such an ordinal exists and is unique is guaranteed by the fact that U is well-orderable and that the class of ordinals is well-ordered, using the axiom of replacement. With the full axiom of choice, every set is well-orderable, so every set has a cardinal; we order the cardinals using the inherited ordering from the ordinal numbers. This is readily found to coincide with the ordering via \leq_c. This is a well-ordering of cardinal numbers.

[edit] Initial ordinal of a cardinal

Each ordinal has an associated cardinal, its cardinality, obtained by simply forgetting the order. Any well-ordered set having that ordinal as its order type has the same cardinality. The smallest ordinal having a given cardinal as its cardinality is called the initial ordinal of that cardinal. Every finite ordinal (natural number) is initial, but most infinite ordinals are not initial. The axiom of choice is equivalent to the statement that every set can be well-ordered, i.e. that every cardinal has an initial ordinal. In this case, it is traditional to identify the cardinal number with its initial ordinal, and we say that the initial ordinal is a cardinal.

The α-th infinite initial ordinal is written ωα. Its cardinality is written \aleph_\alpha. For example, the cardinality of ω0 = ω is \aleph_0, which is also the cardinality of ω² or ε0 (all are countable ordinals). So (assuming the axiom of choice) we identify ω with \aleph_0, except that the notation \aleph_0 is used when writing cardinals, and ω when writing ordinals (this is important since \aleph_0^2=\aleph_0 whereas ω2 > ω). Also, ω1 is the smallest uncountable ordinal (to see that it exists, consider the set of equivalence classes of well-orderings of the natural numbers: each such well-ordering defines a countable ordinal, and ω1 is the order type of that set), ω2 is the smallest ordinal whose cardinality is greater than \aleph_1, and so on, and ωω is the limit of the ωn for natural numbers n (any limit of cardinals is a cardinal, so this limit is indeed the first cardinal after all the ωn).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

In other languages