What this book is about. The theory of sets is a vibrant, exciting math ematical theory, with its own basic notions, fundamental results and deep open problems, and with significant applications to other mathematical theories. At the same time, axiomatic set theory is often viewed as a foun dation ofmathematics: it is alleged that all mathematical objects are sets, and their properties can be derived from the relatively few and elegant axioms about sets. Nothing so simple-minded can be quite true, but there is little doubt that in standard, current mathematical practice, "making a notion precise" is essentially synonymous with "defining it in set theory. " Set theory is the official language of mathematics, just as mathematics is the official language of science. Like most authors of elementary, introductory books about sets, I have tried to do justice to both aspects of the subject. From straight set theory, these Notes cover the basic facts about "ab stract sets," including the Axiom of Choice, transfinite recursion, and car dinal and ordinal numbers. Somewhat less common is the inclusion of a chapter on "pointsets" which focuses on results of interest to analysts and introduces the reader to the Continuum Problem, central to set theory from the very beginning.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
About the First Edition:
This is a sophisticated undergraduate set theory text, brimming with mathematics, and packed with elegant proofs, historical explanations, and enlightening exercises, all presented at just the right level for a first course in set theory.
- Joel David Hamkins, Journal of Symbolic Logic
This is an excellent introduction to axiomatic set theory, viewed both as a foundation of mathematics and as a branch of mathematics with its own subject matter, basic results, open problems.
- Achille C. Varzi, History and Philosophy of Logic
From the reviews of the second edition:
"The author of this very nice introduction into the basic facts of set theory has, in this second edition modified his presentation . simplified proofs, and streamlined the terminology and notation. All the advantages of this text remained." (Siegfried J. Gottwald, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1088 (14), 2006)
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Illustrationen
6
6 s/w Abbildungen
XIV, 273 p. 6 illus.
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-4757-4153-7 (9781475741537)
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4757-4153-7
Schweitzer Klassifikation
1. Introduction.- 2. Equinumerosity.- 3. Paradoxes and axioms.- 4. Are sets all there is?.- 5. The natural numbers.- 6. Fixed points.- 7. Well ordered sets.- 8. Choices.- 9. Choice's consequences.- 10. Baire space.- 11. Replacement and other axioms.- 12. Ordinal numbers.- A. The real numbers.- Congruences.- Fields.- Ordered fields.- Uniqueness of the rationals.- Existence of the rationals.- Countable, dense, linear orderings.- The archimedean property.- Nested interval property.- Dedekind cuts.- Existence of the real numbers.- Uniqueness of the real numbers.- Problems for Appendix A.- B. Axioms and universes.- Set universes.- Propositions and relativizations.- Rieger universes.- Rieger's Theorem.- Bisimulations.- The antifounded universe.- Aczel's Theorem.- Problems for Appendix B.