In mathematics, the axiom of regularity (also known as the axiom of foundation) is an axiom of Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory that states that every non-empty set A contains an element that is disjoint from A. In first-order logic, the axiom reads:
The axiom of regularity together with the axiom of pairing implies that no set is an element of itself, and that there is no infinite sequence (an) such that ai+1 is an element of ai for all i. With the axiom of dependent choice (which is a weakened form of the axiom of choice), this result can be reversed: if there are no such infinite sequences, then the axiom of regularity is true. Hence, in this context the axiom of regularity is equivalent to the sentence that there are no downward infinite membership chains.
The axiom was originally formulated by von Neumann; it was adopted in a formulation closer to the one found in contemporary textbooks by Zermelo. Virtually all results in the branches of mathematics based on set theory hold even in the absence of regularity. However, regularity makes some properties of ordinals easier to prove; and it not only allows induction to be done on well-ordered sets but also on proper classes that are well-founded relational structures such as the lexicographical ordering on
Given the other axioms of Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, the axiom of regularity is equivalent to the axiom of induction. The axiom of induction tends to be used in place of the axiom of regularity in intuitionistic theories (ones that do not accept the law of the excluded middle), where the two axioms are not equivalent.
In addition to omitting the axiom of regularity, non-standard set theories have indeed postulated the existence of sets that are elements of themselves.
Elementary implications of regularity
No set is an element of itself
Let A be a set, and apply the axiom of regularity to {A}, which is a set by the axiom of pairing. We see that there must be an element of {A} which is disjoint from {A}. Since the only element of {A} is A, it must be that A is disjoint from {A}. So, since , we cannot have A an element of A (by the definition of disjoint).
No infinite descending sequence of sets exists
Suppose, to the contrary, that there is a function, f, on the natural numbers with f(n+1) an element of f(n) for each n. Define S = {f(n): n a natural number}, the range of f, which can be seen to be a set from the axiom schema of replacement. Applying the axiom of regularity to S, let B be an element of S which is disjoint from S. By the definition of S, B must be f(k) for some natural number k. However, we are given that f(k) contains f(k+1) which is also an element of S. So f(k+1) is in the intersection of f(k) and S. This contradicts the fact that they are disjoint sets. Since our supposition led to a contradiction, there must not be any such function, f.
The nonexistence of a set containing itself can be seen as a special case where the sequence is infinite and constant.
Notice that this argument only applies to functions f that can be represented as sets as opposed to undefinable classes. The hereditarily finite sets, Vω, satisfy the axiom of regularity (and all other axioms of ZFC except the axiom of infinity). So if one forms a non-trivial ultrapower of Vω, then it will also satisfy the axiom of regularity. The resulting model will contain elements, called non-standard natural numbers, that satisfy the definition of natural numbers in that model but are not really natural numbers.[dubious – discuss] They are "fake" natural numbers which are "larger" than any actual natural number. This model will contain infinite descending sequences of elements.[clarification needed] For example, suppose n is a non-standard natural number, then and , and so on. For any actual natural number k, . This is an unending descending sequence of elements. But this sequence is not definable in the model and thus not a set. So no contradiction to regularity can be proved.
Simpler set-theoretic definition of the ordered pair
The axiom of regularity enables defining the ordered pair (a,b) as {a,{a,b}}; see ordered pair for specifics. This definition eliminates one pair of braces from the canonical Kuratowski definition (a,b) = {{a},{a,b}}.
Every set has an ordinal rank
This was actually the original form of the axiom in von Neumann's axiomatization.
Suppose x is any set. Let t be the transitive closure of {x}. Let u be the subset of t consisting of unranked sets. If u is empty, then x is ranked and we are done. Otherwise, apply the axiom of regularity to u to get an element w of u which is disjoint from u. Since w is in u, w is unranked. w is a subset of t by the definition of transitive closure. Since w is disjoint from u, every element of w is ranked. Applying the axioms of replacement and union to combine the ranks of the elements of w, we get an ordinal rank for w, to wit . This contradicts the conclusion that w is unranked. So the assumption that u was non-empty must be false and x must have rank.
For every two sets, only one can be an element of the other
Let X and Y be sets. Then apply the axiom of regularity to the set {X,Y} (which exists by the axiom of pairing). We see there must be an element of {X,Y} which is also disjoint from it. It must be either X or Y. By the definition of disjoint then, we must have either Y is not an element of X or vice versa.
The axiom of dependent choice and no infinite descending sequence of sets implies regularity
Let the non-empty set S be a counter-example to the axiom of regularity; that is, every element of S has a non-empty intersection with S. We define a binary relation R on S by , which is entire by assumption. Thus, by the axiom of dependent choice, there is some sequence (an) in S satisfying anRan+1 for all n in N. As this is an infinite descending chain, we arrive at a contradiction and so, no such S exists.
Regularity and the rest of ZF(C) axioms
Regularity was shown to be relatively consistent with the rest of ZF by Skolem and von Neumann, meaning that if ZF without regularity is consistent, then ZF (with regularity) is also consistent.
The axiom of regularity was also shown to be independent from the other axioms of ZFC, assuming they are consistent. The result was announced by Paul Bernays in 1941, although he did not publish a proof until 1954. The proof involves (and led to the study of) Rieger-Bernays permutation models (or method), which were used for other proofs of independence for non-well-founded systems.
Regularity and Russell's paradox
Naive set theory (the axiom schema of unrestricted comprehension and the axiom of extensionality) is inconsistent due to Russell's paradox. In early formalizations of sets, mathematicians and logicians have avoided that contradiction by replacing the axiom schema of comprehension with the much weaker axiom schema of separation. However, this step alone takes one to theories of sets which are considered too weak.[clarification needed][citation needed] So some of the power of comprehension was added back via the other existence axioms of ZF set theory (pairing, union, powerset, replacement, and infinity) which may be regarded as special cases of comprehension.[citation needed][clarification needed] So far, these axioms do not seem to lead to any contradiction. Subsequently, the axiom of choice and the axiom of regularity were added to exclude models with some undesirable properties. These two axioms are known to be relatively consistent.
In the presence of the axiom schema of separation, Russell's paradox becomes a proof that there is no set of all sets. The axiom of regularity together with the axiom of pairing also prohibit such a universal set. However, Russell's paradox yields a proof that there is no "set of all sets" using the axiom schema of separation alone, without any additional axioms. In particular, ZF without the axiom of regularity already prohibits such a universal set.
If a theory is extended by adding an axiom or axioms, then any (possibly undesirable) consequences of the original theory remain consequences of the extended theory. In particular, if ZF without regularity is extended by adding regularity to get ZF, then any contradiction (such as Russell's paradox) which followed from the original theory would still follow in the extended theory.
The existence of Quine atoms (sets that satisfy the formula equation x = {x}, i.e. have themselves as their only elements) is consistent with the theory obtained by removing the axiom of regularity from ZFC. Various non-wellfounded set theories allow "safe" circular sets, such as Quine atoms, without becoming inconsistent by means of Russell's paradox.
Regularity, the cumulative hierarchy, and types
In ZF it can be proven that the class , called the von Neumann universe, is equal to the class of all sets. This statement is even equivalent to the axiom of regularity (if we work in ZF with this axiom omitted). From any model which does not satisfy the axiom of regularity, a model which satisfies it can be constructed by taking only sets in .
Herbert Enderton wrote that "The idea of rank is a descendant of Russell's concept of type". Comparing ZF with type theory, Alasdair Urquhart wrote that "Zermelo's system has the notational advantage of not containing any explicitly typed variables, although in fact it can be seen as having an implicit type structure built into it, at least if the axiom of regularity is included.
Dana Scott went further and claimed that:
The truth is that there is only one satisfactory way of avoiding the paradoxes: namely, the use of some form of the theory of types. That was at the basis of both Russell's and Zermelo's intuitions. Indeed the best way to regard Zermelo's theory is as a simplification and extension of Russell's. (We mean Russell's simple theory of types, of course.) The simplification was to make the types cumulative. Thus mixing of types is easier and annoying repetitions are avoided. Once the later types are allowed to accumulate the earlier ones, we can then easily imagine extending the types into the transfinite—just how far we want to go must necessarily be left open. Now Russell made his types explicit in his notation and Zermelo left them implicit. [emphasis in original]
In the same paper, Scott shows that an axiomatic system based on the inherent properties of the cumulative hierarchy turns out to be equivalent to ZF, including regularity.
History
The concept of well-foundedness and rank of a set were both introduced by Dmitry Mirimanoff. Mirimanoff called a set x "regular" (French: ordinaire) if every descending chain x ∋ x1 ∋ x2 ∋ ... is finite. Mirimanoff however did not consider his notion of regularity (and well-foundedness) as an axiom to be observed by all sets; in later papers Mirimanoff also explored what are now called non-well-founded sets (extraordinaire in Mirimanoff's terminology).
Skolem and von Neumann pointed out that non-well-founded sets are superfluous and in the same publication von Neumann gives an axiom which excludes some, but not all, non-well-founded sets. In a subsequent publication, von Neumann gave an equivalent but more complex version of the axiom of class foundation:
The contemporary and final form of the axiom is due to Zermelo.
Regularity in the presence of urelements
Urelements are objects that are not sets, but which can be elements of sets. In ZF set theory, there are no urelements, but in some other set theories such as ZFA, there are. In these theories, the axiom of regularity must be modified. The statement "" needs to be replaced with a statement that is not empty and is not an urelement. One suitable replacement is , which states that x is inhabited.
See also
- Non-well-founded set theory
- Scott's trick
- Epsilon-induction
References
- von Neumann 1925.
- Zermelo 1930.
- Kunen 1980, ch. 3.
- Skolem 1923.
- von Neumann 1929.
- For his[ambiguous] proof in modern notation, see Vaught (2001, §10.1) for instance.
- Rathjen 2004, p. 193.
- Forster 2003, pp. 210–212.
- Rieger 2011, pp. 175, 178.
- Enderton 1977, p. 206.
- The details of this implicit typing are spelled out in Zermelo 1930, and again in Boolos 1971.
- Urquhart 2003, p. 305.
- Scott 1974.
- Lévy 2002, p. 73.
- Mirimanoff 1917.
- cf. Lévy 2002, p. 68 and Hallett 1996, §4.4, esp. p. 186, 188.
- Halbeisen 2012, pp. 62–63.
- Sangiorgi 2011, pp. 17–19, 26.
- van Heijenoort 1967, p. 404.
- van Heijenoort 1967, p. 412.
- Rieger 2011, p. 179.
- von Neumann 1929, p. 231.
- cf. Suppes 1972, p. 53 and Lévy 2002, p. 72
Sources
- Bernays, Paul Isaac (1941). "A system of axiomatic set theory. Part II". The Journal of Symbolic Logic. 6 (1): 1–17. doi:10.2307/2267281. JSTOR 2267281. S2CID 250344277.
- Bernays, Paul Isaac (1954). "A system of axiomatic set theory. Part VII" (PDF). The Journal of Symbolic Logic. 19 (2): 81–96. doi:10.2307/2268864. JSTOR 2268864. S2CID 250351655.
- Boolos, George (1971). "The iterative conception of set". Journal of Philosophy. 68 (8): 215–231. doi:10.2307/2025204. JSTOR 2025204. Reprinted in Boolos, George (1998). Logic, Logic and Logic. Harvard University Press. pp. 13–29.
- Enderton, Herbert B. (1977). Elements of Set Theory. Academic Press.
- Forster, T. (2003). Logic, induction and sets. Cambridge University Press.
- Halbeisen, Lorenz J. (2012). Combinatorial Set Theory: With a Gentle Introduction to Forcing. Springer.
- Hallett, Michael (1996) [first published 1984]. Cantorian set theory and limitation of size. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-853283-5.
- Jech, Thomas (2003). Set Theory (Third Millennium ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-44085-7.
- Kunen, Kenneth (1980). Set Theory: An Introduction to Independence Proofs. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-444-86839-8.
- Lévy, Azriel (2002) [first published in 1979]. Basic set theory. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-42079-0.
- Mirimanoff, Dmitry (1917). "Les antinomies de Russell et de Burali-Forti et le probleme fondamental de la theorie des ensembles". L'Enseignement Mathématique (in French). 19: 37–52.
- Rathjen, M. (2004). "Predicativity, Circularity, and Anti-Foundation" (PDF). In Link, Godehard (ed.). One Hundred Years of Russell's Paradox: Mathematics, Logic, Philosophy. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-019968-0. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
- Rieger, Adam (2011). "Paradox, ZF, and the Axiom of Foundation" (PDF). In DeVidi, David; Hallett, Michael; Clark, Peter (eds.). Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy, Vintage Enthusiasms. Essays in Honour of John L. Bell. The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science. Vol. 75. pp. 171–187. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.100.9052. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-0214-1_9. ISBN 978-94-007-0213-4.
- Riegger, L. (1957). "A contribution to Gödel's axiomatic set theory" (PDF). Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal. 7 (3): 323–357. doi:10.21136/CMJ.1957.100254.
- Sangiorgi, Davide (2011). "Origins of bisimulation and coinduction". In Sangiorgi, Davide; Rutten, Jan (eds.). Advanced Topics in Bisimulation and Coinduction. Cambridge University Press.
- Scott, Dana Stewart (1974). "Axiomatizing set theory". Axiomatic set theory. Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics. Vol. 13. Part II, pp. 207–214.
- Skolem, Thoralf (1923). Axiomatized set theory. Reprinted in From Frege to Gödel, van Heijenoort, 1967, in English translation by Stefan Bauer-Mengelberg, pp. 291–301.
- Suppes, Patrick (1972) [first published 1960]. Axiomatic Set Theory. Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-61630-8.
- Urquhart, Alasdair (2003). "The Theory of Types". In Griffin, Nicholas (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Bertrand Russell. Cambridge University Press.
- Vaught, Robert L. (2001). Set Theory: An Introduction (2nd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-0-8176-4256-3.
- von Neumann, John (1925). "Eine Axiomatisierung der Mengenlehre". Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik (in German). 154: 219–240. Translation in van Heijenoort, Jean (1967). From Frege to Gödel: A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879–1931. pp. 393–413.
- von Neumann, John (1928). "Über die Definition durch transfinite Induktion und verwandte Fragen der allgemeinen Mengenlehre". Mathematische Annalen (in German). 99: 373–391. doi:10.1007/BF01459102. S2CID 120784562.
- von Neumann, John (1929). "Über eine Widerspruchfreiheitsfrage in der axiomatischen Mengenlehre". Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik (in German). 1929 (160): 227–241. doi:10.1515/crll.1929.160.227. S2CID 199545822.
- Zermelo, Ernst (1930). "Über Grenzzahlen und Mengenbereiche. Neue Untersuchungen über die Grundlagen der Mengenlehre" (PDF). Fundamenta Mathematicae (in German). 16: 29–47. doi:10.4064/fm-16-1-29-47. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Translation in Ewald, W. B., ed. (1996). From Kant to Hilbert: A Source Book in the Foundations of Mathematics. Vol. 2. Clarendon Press. pp. 1219–1233.
External links
- Axiom of foundation at PlanetMath.
- Inhabited set and the axiom of foundation on nLab
In mathematics the axiom of regularity also known as the axiom of foundation is an axiom of Zermelo Fraenkel set theory that states that every non empty set A contains an element that is disjoint from A In first order logic the axiom reads x x y x y x displaystyle forall x x neq varnothing rightarrow exists y in x y cap x varnothing The axiom of regularity together with the axiom of pairing implies that no set is an element of itself and that there is no infinite sequence an such that ai 1 is an element of ai for all i With the axiom of dependent choice which is a weakened form of the axiom of choice this result can be reversed if there are no such infinite sequences then the axiom of regularity is true Hence in this context the axiom of regularity is equivalent to the sentence that there are no downward infinite membership chains The axiom was originally formulated by von Neumann it was adopted in a formulation closer to the one found in contemporary textbooks by Zermelo Virtually all results in the branches of mathematics based on set theory hold even in the absence of regularity However regularity makes some properties of ordinals easier to prove and it not only allows induction to be done on well ordered sets but also on proper classes that are well founded relational structures such as the lexicographical ordering on n a n w a is an ordinal textstyle n alpha mid n in omega land alpha text is an ordinal Given the other axioms of Zermelo Fraenkel set theory the axiom of regularity is equivalent to the axiom of induction The axiom of induction tends to be used in place of the axiom of regularity in intuitionistic theories ones that do not accept the law of the excluded middle where the two axioms are not equivalent In addition to omitting the axiom of regularity non standard set theories have indeed postulated the existence of sets that are elements of themselves Elementary implications of regularityNo set is an element of itself Let A be a set and apply the axiom of regularity to A which is a set by the axiom of pairing We see that there must be an element of A which is disjoint from A Since the only element of A is A it must be that A is disjoint from A So since A A textstyle A cap A varnothing we cannot have A an element of A by the definition of disjoint No infinite descending sequence of sets exists Suppose to the contrary that there is a function f on the natural numbers with f n 1 an element of f n for each n Define S f n n a natural number the range of f which can be seen to be a set from the axiom schema of replacement Applying the axiom of regularity to S let B be an element of S which is disjoint from S By the definition of S B must be f k for some natural number k However we are given that f k contains f k 1 which is also an element of S So f k 1 is in the intersection of f k and S This contradicts the fact that they are disjoint sets Since our supposition led to a contradiction there must not be any such function f The nonexistence of a set containing itself can be seen as a special case where the sequence is infinite and constant Notice that this argument only applies to functions f that can be represented as sets as opposed to undefinable classes The hereditarily finite sets Vw satisfy the axiom of regularity and all other axioms of ZFC except the axiom of infinity So if one forms a non trivial ultrapower of Vw then it will also satisfy the axiom of regularity The resulting model will contain elements called non standard natural numbers that satisfy the definition of natural numbers in that model but are not really natural numbers dubious discuss They are fake natural numbers which are larger than any actual natural number This model will contain infinite descending sequences of elements clarification needed For example suppose n is a non standard natural number then n 1 n textstyle n 1 in n and n 2 n 1 textstyle n 2 in n 1 and so on For any actual natural number k n k 1 n k textstyle n k 1 in n k This is an unending descending sequence of elements But this sequence is not definable in the model and thus not a set So no contradiction to regularity can be proved Simpler set theoretic definition of the ordered pair The axiom of regularity enables defining the ordered pair a b as a a b see ordered pair for specifics This definition eliminates one pair of braces from the canonical Kuratowski definition a b a a b Every set has an ordinal rank This was actually the original form of the axiom in von Neumann s axiomatization Suppose x is any set Let t be the transitive closure of x Let u be the subset of t consisting of unranked sets If u is empty then x is ranked and we are done Otherwise apply the axiom of regularity to u to get an element w of u which is disjoint from u Since w is in u w is unranked w is a subset of t by the definition of transitive closure Since w is disjoint from u every element of w is ranked Applying the axioms of replacement and union to combine the ranks of the elements of w we get an ordinal rank for w to wit rank w rank z 1 z w textstyle textstyle operatorname rank w cup operatorname rank z 1 mid z in w This contradicts the conclusion that w is unranked So the assumption that u was non empty must be false and x must have rank For every two sets only one can be an element of the other Let X and Y be sets Then apply the axiom of regularity to the set X Y which exists by the axiom of pairing We see there must be an element of X Y which is also disjoint from it It must be either X or Y By the definition of disjoint then we must have either Y is not an element of X or vice versa The axiom of dependent choice and no infinite descending sequence of sets implies regularityLet the non empty set S be a counter example to the axiom of regularity that is every element of S has a non empty intersection with S We define a binary relation R on S by aRb b S a textstyle aRb Leftrightarrow b in S cap a which is entire by assumption Thus by the axiom of dependent choice there is some sequence an in S satisfying anRan 1 for all n in N As this is an infinite descending chain we arrive at a contradiction and so no such S exists Regularity and the rest of ZF C axiomsRegularity was shown to be relatively consistent with the rest of ZF by Skolem and von Neumann meaning that if ZF without regularity is consistent then ZF with regularity is also consistent The axiom of regularity was also shown to be independent from the other axioms of ZFC assuming they are consistent The result was announced by Paul Bernays in 1941 although he did not publish a proof until 1954 The proof involves and led to the study of Rieger Bernays permutation models or method which were used for other proofs of independence for non well founded systems Regularity and Russell s paradoxNaive set theory the axiom schema of unrestricted comprehension and the axiom of extensionality is inconsistent due to Russell s paradox In early formalizations of sets mathematicians and logicians have avoided that contradiction by replacing the axiom schema of comprehension with the much weaker axiom schema of separation However this step alone takes one to theories of sets which are considered too weak clarification needed citation needed So some of the power of comprehension was added back via the other existence axioms of ZF set theory pairing union powerset replacement and infinity which may be regarded as special cases of comprehension citation needed clarification needed So far these axioms do not seem to lead to any contradiction Subsequently the axiom of choice and the axiom of regularity were added to exclude models with some undesirable properties These two axioms are known to be relatively consistent In the presence of the axiom schema of separation Russell s paradox becomes a proof that there is no set of all sets The axiom of regularity together with the axiom of pairing also prohibit such a universal set However Russell s paradox yields a proof that there is no set of all sets using the axiom schema of separation alone without any additional axioms In particular ZF without the axiom of regularity already prohibits such a universal set If a theory is extended by adding an axiom or axioms then any possibly undesirable consequences of the original theory remain consequences of the extended theory In particular if ZF without regularity is extended by adding regularity to get ZF then any contradiction such as Russell s paradox which followed from the original theory would still follow in the extended theory The existence of Quine atoms sets that satisfy the formula equation x x i e have themselves as their only elements is consistent with the theory obtained by removing the axiom of regularity from ZFC Various non wellfounded set theories allow safe circular sets such as Quine atoms without becoming inconsistent by means of Russell s paradox Regularity the cumulative hierarchy and typesIn ZF it can be proven that the class aVa textstyle bigcup alpha V alpha called the von Neumann universe is equal to the class of all sets This statement is even equivalent to the axiom of regularity if we work in ZF with this axiom omitted From any model which does not satisfy the axiom of regularity a model which satisfies it can be constructed by taking only sets in aVa textstyle bigcup alpha V alpha Herbert Enderton wrote that The idea of rank is a descendant of Russell s concept of type Comparing ZF with type theory Alasdair Urquhart wrote that Zermelo s system has the notational advantage of not containing any explicitly typed variables although in fact it can be seen as having an implicit type structure built into it at least if the axiom of regularity is included Dana Scott went further and claimed that The truth is that there is only one satisfactory way of avoiding the paradoxes namely the use of some form of the theory of types That was at the basis of both Russell s and Zermelo s intuitions Indeed the best way to regard Zermelo s theory is as a simplification and extension of Russell s We mean Russell s simple theory of types of course The simplification was to make the types cumulative Thus mixing of types is easier and annoying repetitions are avoided Once the later types are allowed to accumulate the earlier ones we can then easily imagine extending the types into the transfinite just how far we want to go must necessarily be left open Now Russell made his types explicit in his notation and Zermelo left them implicit emphasis in original In the same paper Scott shows that an axiomatic system based on the inherent properties of the cumulative hierarchy turns out to be equivalent to ZF including regularity HistoryThe concept of well foundedness and rank of a set were both introduced by Dmitry Mirimanoff Mirimanoff called a set x regular French ordinaire if every descending chain x x1 x2 is finite Mirimanoff however did not consider his notion of regularity and well foundedness as an axiom to be observed by all sets in later papers Mirimanoff also explored what are now called non well founded sets extraordinaire in Mirimanoff s terminology Skolem and von Neumann pointed out that non well founded sets are superfluous and in the same publication von Neumann gives an axiom which excludes some but not all non well founded sets In a subsequent publication von Neumann gave an equivalent but more complex version of the axiom of class foundation A x A x A displaystyle A neq emptyset rightarrow exists x in A x cap A emptyset The contemporary and final form of the axiom is due to Zermelo Regularity in the presence of urelementsUrelements are objects that are not sets but which can be elements of sets In ZF set theory there are no urelements but in some other set theories such as ZFA there are In these theories the axiom of regularity must be modified The statement x textstyle x neq emptyset needs to be replaced with a statement that x textstyle x is not empty and is not an urelement One suitable replacement is y y x textstyle exists y y in x which states that x is inhabited See alsoNon well founded set theory Scott s trick Epsilon inductionReferencesvon Neumann 1925 Zermelo 1930 Kunen 1980 ch 3 Skolem 1923 von Neumann 1929 For his ambiguous proof in modern notation see Vaught 2001 10 1 for instance Rathjen 2004 p 193 Forster 2003 pp 210 212 Rieger 2011 pp 175 178 Enderton 1977 p 206 The details of this implicit typing are spelled out in Zermelo 1930 and again in Boolos 1971 Urquhart 2003 p 305 Scott 1974 Levy 2002 p 73 Mirimanoff 1917 cf Levy 2002 p 68 and Hallett 1996 4 4 esp p 186 188 Halbeisen 2012 pp 62 63 Sangiorgi 2011 pp 17 19 26 van Heijenoort 1967 p 404 van Heijenoort 1967 p 412 Rieger 2011 p 179 von Neumann 1929 p 231 cf Suppes 1972 p 53 and Levy 2002 p 72SourcesBernays Paul Isaac 1941 A system of axiomatic set theory Part II The Journal of Symbolic Logic 6 1 1 17 doi 10 2307 2267281 JSTOR 2267281 S2CID 250344277 Bernays Paul Isaac 1954 A system of axiomatic set theory Part VII PDF The Journal of Symbolic Logic 19 2 81 96 doi 10 2307 2268864 JSTOR 2268864 S2CID 250351655 Boolos George 1971 The iterative conception of set Journal of Philosophy 68 8 215 231 doi 10 2307 2025204 JSTOR 2025204 Reprinted in Boolos George 1998 Logic Logic and Logic Harvard University Press pp 13 29 Enderton Herbert B 1977 Elements of Set Theory Academic Press Forster T 2003 Logic induction and sets Cambridge University Press Halbeisen Lorenz J 2012 Combinatorial Set Theory With a Gentle Introduction to Forcing Springer Hallett Michael 1996 first published 1984 Cantorian set theory and limitation of size Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 853283 5 Jech Thomas 2003 Set Theory Third Millennium ed Springer ISBN 978 3 540 44085 7 Kunen Kenneth 1980 Set Theory An Introduction to Independence Proofs Elsevier ISBN 978 0 444 86839 8 Levy Azriel 2002 first published in 1979 Basic set theory Mineola New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 42079 0 Mirimanoff Dmitry 1917 Les antinomies de Russell et de Burali Forti et le probleme fondamental de la theorie des ensembles L Enseignement Mathematique in French 19 37 52 Rathjen M 2004 Predicativity Circularity and Anti Foundation PDF In Link Godehard ed One Hundred Years of Russell s Paradox Mathematics Logic Philosophy Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 019968 0 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Rieger Adam 2011 Paradox ZF and the Axiom of Foundation PDF In DeVidi David Hallett Michael Clark Peter eds Logic Mathematics Philosophy Vintage Enthusiasms Essays in Honour of John L Bell The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science Vol 75 pp 171 187 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 100 9052 doi 10 1007 978 94 007 0214 1 9 ISBN 978 94 007 0213 4 Riegger L 1957 A contribution to Godel s axiomatic set theory PDF Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal 7 3 323 357 doi 10 21136 CMJ 1957 100254 Sangiorgi Davide 2011 Origins of bisimulation and coinduction In Sangiorgi Davide Rutten Jan eds Advanced Topics in Bisimulation and Coinduction Cambridge University Press Scott Dana Stewart 1974 Axiomatizing set theory Axiomatic set theory Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics Vol 13 Part II pp 207 214 Skolem Thoralf 1923 Axiomatized set theory Reprinted in From Frege to Godel van Heijenoort 1967 in English translation by Stefan Bauer Mengelberg pp 291 301 Suppes Patrick 1972 first published 1960 Axiomatic Set Theory Dover ISBN 978 0 486 61630 8 Urquhart Alasdair 2003 The Theory of Types In Griffin Nicholas ed The Cambridge Companion to Bertrand Russell Cambridge University Press Vaught Robert L 2001 Set Theory An Introduction 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 0 8176 4256 3 von Neumann John 1925 Eine Axiomatisierung der Mengenlehre Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik in German 154 219 240 Translation in van Heijenoort Jean 1967 From Frege to Godel A Source Book in Mathematical Logic 1879 1931 pp 393 413 von Neumann John 1928 Uber die Definition durch transfinite Induktion und verwandte Fragen der allgemeinen Mengenlehre Mathematische Annalen in German 99 373 391 doi 10 1007 BF01459102 S2CID 120784562 von Neumann John 1929 Uber eine Widerspruchfreiheitsfrage in der axiomatischen Mengenlehre Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik in German 1929 160 227 241 doi 10 1515 crll 1929 160 227 S2CID 199545822 Zermelo Ernst 1930 Uber Grenzzahlen und Mengenbereiche Neue Untersuchungen uber die Grundlagen der Mengenlehre PDF Fundamenta Mathematicae in German 16 29 47 doi 10 4064 fm 16 1 29 47 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Translation in Ewald W B ed 1996 From Kant to Hilbert A Source Book in the Foundations of Mathematics Vol 2 Clarendon Press pp 1219 1233 External linksAxiom of foundation at PlanetMath Inhabited set and the axiom of foundation on nLab