there wasn't enough clarity with regards to what it is for a set to be a member of itself, and what it is for a set to not be a member of itself. — Philosopher19
Call any set that is not a member of itself a -V. Call any set that is not the set of all sets a V'. Call any set that's simply a set, a V (the V of all Vs = the set of all sets). — Philosopher19
Is the V of all -Vs a member of itself? — Philosopher19
It is impossible to have a V of all -Vs that contains all -Vs and no other sets. — Philosopher19
You cannot have a set of all sets that are not members of themselves that is itself not a member of itself. — Philosopher19
one V can contain all -Vs and something more. — Philosopher19
he set of all sets encompasses all sets. It encompasses all sets that are not members of themselves, and it is a member of itself (because it encompasses itself). No contradictions here. — Philosopher19
Suppose B is a set that contains itself:.{1, 2, {1, 2, {1, 2,..the task can't be completed. — TheMadFool
Can we construct a set of all sets that don't contain themselves? Why not? — TheMadFool
Of course we can because ALL sets can't contain themselves. — TheMadFool
.
1. All sets don't contain themselves.
2. The set of all sets that don't contain themselves = The set of all sets.
3. The set of all sets is impossible because it can't be member of itself and so it can't be the set of all sets. (from 1)
4. The set of all sets that don't contain itself is also impossible (from 2 and 3).
5. For Russell's paradox, the set of all sets that don't contain itself must be a set.
6. The set of all sets that don't contain itself is impossible i.e. it isn't a set.
Ergo,
7. Russell's paradox is not a paradox. — TheMadFool
Now consider this: x, y, and z, are sets that are members of themselves. It cannot be the case that x = {x, y, z} [...] — Philosopher19
Do you see the inconsistency in saying "you cannot have a set of all sets that are not members of themselves, but you can have a set of all sets that are members of themselves". — Philosopher19
saying there can be no set that encompasses all sets is blatantly contradictory — Philosopher19
It's a contradiction for something to be a member of itself twice. — Philosopher19
It's a contradiction for something to be a member of itself twice. — Philosopher19
I don't like using markup. The text is plenty clear enough. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Set theory doesn't prove things in this kind of context by saying "the task cannot be completed". — TonesInDeepFreeze
C = The set of all sets that contains itself. Doesn't seem to be problematic — TheMadFool
Just give me one instance of a set that contains itself. — TheMadFool
A set that contains itself: ??? — TheMadFool
x = {x} — TonesInDeepFreeze
examples — fishfry
Without the axiom of regularity, you can't prove
~Ex x = {x} = {{x}} = {{{x}}} ... for as finitely many iterations you want to make. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then, there can't be a set that contains itself — TheMadFool
You mentioned that without the axiom of regularity, we can't prove ~Ex xex. As far as I can tell that means,
Can prove ~Ex xex -> Axiom of regularity. — TheMadFool
Since I've proved a set can't contain itself, it follows that I've assumed the axiom of regularity then. — TheMadFool
Can you prove that a set contain itself? Feel free to use any axiom of your choice. — TheMadFool
Challenge for you: Can you prove that a set contain itself? Feel free to use any axiom of your choice. — TheMadFool
An accessible pointed graph is a directed graph with a distinguished vertex (the "root") such that for any node in the graph there is at least one path in the directed graph from the root to that node.
The anti-foundation axiom postulates that each such directed graph corresponds to the membership structure of a unique set. For example, the directed graph with only one node and an edge from that node to itself corresponds to a set of the form x = {x}.
consistency proofs for ZF with the negation of the axiom of foundation/regularity. — fishfry
there has to be a set N ="{...} such that it contains itself — TheMadFool
where x = no, one, or more members of that set. — TheMadFool
3. N is a proper subset of {x, N} — TheMadFool
That went over my head. — TheMadFool
is no reason for supposing that you can't have a set that contains itself as a member — Amalac
well, you've given no reason to accept that yet, except that x would “contain itself twice” — Amalac
If there is a set of all sets, then it has the subset that is the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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