Hartogs number

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English[edit]

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Etymology[edit]

After German-Jewish mathematician Friedrich Hartogs (1874–1943).

Noun[edit]

Hartogs number (plural Hartogs numbers)

  1. (set theory) For a given set X, the cardinality of the least ordinal number α such that there is no injection from α into X.
    • 1973 [North-Holland], Thomas J. Jech, The Axiom of Choice, 2013, Dover, page 160,
      Let be an infinite cardinal, and let be the Hartogs number of .
    • 1995, The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic, Volume 1, Association for Symbolic Logic, page 139,
      If the Power Set Axiom is replaced by " is bound for every x" where
      is one-to-one function from into ,
      then the theory is denoted by ZFH (H stands for Hartogs' Number).
    • 2014, Barnaby Sheppard, The Logic of Infinity, Cambridge University Press, page 341:
      Since the proof of Hartogs' Theorem does not appeal to the Axiom of Choice, the Hartogs number of a set X exists whether or not X has a well-ordering.

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