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1 - Theory of sets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

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Summary

Sets

We do not want to become involved in the logical foundations of mathematics. In order to avoid these we will adopt a rather naïve attitude to set theory. This will not lead us into difficulties because in any given situation we will be considering sets which are all contained in (are subsets of) a fixed set or space or suitable collections of such sets. The logical difficulties which can arise in set theory only appear when one considers sets which are ‘too big’–like the set of all sets, for instance. We assume the basic algebraic properties of the positive integers, the real numbers, and Euclidean spaces and make no attempt to obtain these from more primitive set theoretic notions. However, we will give an outline development (in Chapter 2) of the topological properties of these sets.

In a space X a set E is well defined if there is a rule which determines, for each element (or point) x in X, whether or not it is in E. We write xE (read ‘x belongs to E’) whenever x is an element of E, and the negation of this statement is written xE. Given two sets E, F we say that E is contained in F, or E is a subset of F, or F contains E and write EF if every element x in E also belongs to F.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1966

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