Why has Russell's definition of numbers using equivalence classes been finally abandoned? ( If it has...

How did the USSR manage to innovate in an environment characterized by government censorship and high bureaucracy?

Where else does the Shulchan Aruch quote an authority by name?

How to deal with fear of taking dependencies

LWC and complex parameters

map list to bin numbers

What causes the sudden spool-up sound from an F-16 when enabling afterburner?

If a centaur druid Wild Shapes into a Giant Elk, do their Charge features stack?

Are objects structures and/or vice versa?

Does a dangling wire really electrocute me if I'm standing in water?

Can a planet have a different gravitational pull depending on its location in orbit around its sun?

Is there a way to make member function NOT callable from constructor?

Calculate Levenshtein distance between two strings in Python

Is domain driven design an anti-SQL pattern?

Where to refill my bottle in India?

Is every set a filtered colimit of finite sets?

What do the Banks children have against barley water?

Extreme, but not acceptable situation and I can't start the work tomorrow morning

Is there any use for defining additional entity types in a SOQL FROM clause?

Doomsday-clock for my fantasy planet

Is Social Media Science Fiction?

Is it wise to hold on to stock that has plummeted and then stabilized?

What are the advantages and disadvantages of running one shots compared to campaigns?

Email Account under attack (really) - anything I can do?

Typesetting a double Over Dot on top of a symbol



Why has Russell's definition of numbers using equivalence classes been finally abandoned? ( If it has actually been abandoned).


What is the difference between a class and a set?how to express the set of natural numbers in ZFCCardinality of Vitali sets: countably or uncountably infinite?Do we always use the Axiom of Choice when picking from uncountable number of sets?Class of all finite setsWhy doesn't this definition of natural numbers hold up in axiomatic set theory?What is the domain of the successor function?Understanding impredicative definitionsProve the intersection of every nonempty family of successor sets is a successor set itselfIs it possible to define countability without referring the natural numbers?Defining uncountably infinite set













11












$begingroup$


I'm trying to understand the evolution of the concept of number since Frege/ Russell and to see the "big picture".



What are the main motivations explaining the change from Russell's definition using equivalence classes ( in "Introduction to mathematical philosophy") and the current definition of (natural numbers) using the successor function?





The "stages" I can see are the following. Would you please assess the reasons I have imagined to explain (to myself) the passage from one stage to another?



(1) Frege / Russell recognized that numbers were higher-order properties, not properties of things , but of sets



(2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes, using the relation of "the set X is equinumerous to set Y" (iff there exist at least one bijection from X to Y)



(3) To identify each number (that is each class) we would need a "standard" in each class. For example, one could use{ Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger} as a representative of the numbers having 5 elements. In that case, one would say:




the number 5 is the set of all X such that there exists a bijection from X to the set { Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger }




and




X has 5 as cardinal number iff X belongs to the set 5




(4) But the use of these representatives requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards. Furthermore, it obliges us to admit that the existence of numbers depends on contingent facts of the world, that is, the existence of these elements belonging to our " standards".



(5) So to get rid of these existential presupposions, we decide to chose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost". As standard for the set "zero", we use { } (as we did before. But as standard for the set 1, we now use



{ 0 } (that certainly exists if 0 = { } exists.



and as standard for the set 2, we use { 0, 1} , etc. In this way, our construction becomes independent of the existence of concrete things in the world.



(6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard". So instead of saying that "2 is the set of sets that can be put in $1-1$ correspondance with the standard ${ 0,1}$", we simply say that



the number $2$ is (by definition) the set ${ 0,1}$.



(7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function ( $S($number $x)$ is by definition the union of number $x$ and of ${x}$) which "generates" an infinite series of numbers "out of" the null set.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
    $endgroup$
    – Noah Schweber
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
    $endgroup$
    – Don Thousand
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday
















11












$begingroup$


I'm trying to understand the evolution of the concept of number since Frege/ Russell and to see the "big picture".



What are the main motivations explaining the change from Russell's definition using equivalence classes ( in "Introduction to mathematical philosophy") and the current definition of (natural numbers) using the successor function?





The "stages" I can see are the following. Would you please assess the reasons I have imagined to explain (to myself) the passage from one stage to another?



(1) Frege / Russell recognized that numbers were higher-order properties, not properties of things , but of sets



(2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes, using the relation of "the set X is equinumerous to set Y" (iff there exist at least one bijection from X to Y)



(3) To identify each number (that is each class) we would need a "standard" in each class. For example, one could use{ Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger} as a representative of the numbers having 5 elements. In that case, one would say:




the number 5 is the set of all X such that there exists a bijection from X to the set { Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger }




and




X has 5 as cardinal number iff X belongs to the set 5




(4) But the use of these representatives requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards. Furthermore, it obliges us to admit that the existence of numbers depends on contingent facts of the world, that is, the existence of these elements belonging to our " standards".



(5) So to get rid of these existential presupposions, we decide to chose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost". As standard for the set "zero", we use { } (as we did before. But as standard for the set 1, we now use



{ 0 } (that certainly exists if 0 = { } exists.



and as standard for the set 2, we use { 0, 1} , etc. In this way, our construction becomes independent of the existence of concrete things in the world.



(6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard". So instead of saying that "2 is the set of sets that can be put in $1-1$ correspondance with the standard ${ 0,1}$", we simply say that



the number $2$ is (by definition) the set ${ 0,1}$.



(7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function ( $S($number $x)$ is by definition the union of number $x$ and of ${x}$) which "generates" an infinite series of numbers "out of" the null set.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
    $endgroup$
    – Noah Schweber
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
    $endgroup$
    – Don Thousand
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday














11












11








11


1



$begingroup$


I'm trying to understand the evolution of the concept of number since Frege/ Russell and to see the "big picture".



What are the main motivations explaining the change from Russell's definition using equivalence classes ( in "Introduction to mathematical philosophy") and the current definition of (natural numbers) using the successor function?





The "stages" I can see are the following. Would you please assess the reasons I have imagined to explain (to myself) the passage from one stage to another?



(1) Frege / Russell recognized that numbers were higher-order properties, not properties of things , but of sets



(2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes, using the relation of "the set X is equinumerous to set Y" (iff there exist at least one bijection from X to Y)



(3) To identify each number (that is each class) we would need a "standard" in each class. For example, one could use{ Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger} as a representative of the numbers having 5 elements. In that case, one would say:




the number 5 is the set of all X such that there exists a bijection from X to the set { Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger }




and




X has 5 as cardinal number iff X belongs to the set 5




(4) But the use of these representatives requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards. Furthermore, it obliges us to admit that the existence of numbers depends on contingent facts of the world, that is, the existence of these elements belonging to our " standards".



(5) So to get rid of these existential presupposions, we decide to chose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost". As standard for the set "zero", we use { } (as we did before. But as standard for the set 1, we now use



{ 0 } (that certainly exists if 0 = { } exists.



and as standard for the set 2, we use { 0, 1} , etc. In this way, our construction becomes independent of the existence of concrete things in the world.



(6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard". So instead of saying that "2 is the set of sets that can be put in $1-1$ correspondance with the standard ${ 0,1}$", we simply say that



the number $2$ is (by definition) the set ${ 0,1}$.



(7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function ( $S($number $x)$ is by definition the union of number $x$ and of ${x}$) which "generates" an infinite series of numbers "out of" the null set.










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




I'm trying to understand the evolution of the concept of number since Frege/ Russell and to see the "big picture".



What are the main motivations explaining the change from Russell's definition using equivalence classes ( in "Introduction to mathematical philosophy") and the current definition of (natural numbers) using the successor function?





The "stages" I can see are the following. Would you please assess the reasons I have imagined to explain (to myself) the passage from one stage to another?



(1) Frege / Russell recognized that numbers were higher-order properties, not properties of things , but of sets



(2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes, using the relation of "the set X is equinumerous to set Y" (iff there exist at least one bijection from X to Y)



(3) To identify each number (that is each class) we would need a "standard" in each class. For example, one could use{ Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger} as a representative of the numbers having 5 elements. In that case, one would say:




the number 5 is the set of all X such that there exists a bijection from X to the set { Thumb, Index, Middle finger, Ring finger, Pinky finger }




and




X has 5 as cardinal number iff X belongs to the set 5




(4) But the use of these representatives requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards. Furthermore, it obliges us to admit that the existence of numbers depends on contingent facts of the world, that is, the existence of these elements belonging to our " standards".



(5) So to get rid of these existential presupposions, we decide to chose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost". As standard for the set "zero", we use { } (as we did before. But as standard for the set 1, we now use



{ 0 } (that certainly exists if 0 = { } exists.



and as standard for the set 2, we use { 0, 1} , etc. In this way, our construction becomes independent of the existence of concrete things in the world.



(6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard". So instead of saying that "2 is the set of sets that can be put in $1-1$ correspondance with the standard ${ 0,1}$", we simply say that



the number $2$ is (by definition) the set ${ 0,1}$.



(7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function ( $S($number $x)$ is by definition the union of number $x$ and of ${x}$) which "generates" an infinite series of numbers "out of" the null set.







elementary-set-theory






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited yesterday









Nij

2,01611323




2,01611323










asked yesterday









Eleonore Saint JamesEleonore Saint James

769




769








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
    $endgroup$
    – Noah Schweber
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
    $endgroup$
    – Don Thousand
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday














  • 2




    $begingroup$
    That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
    $endgroup$
    – Noah Schweber
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
    $endgroup$
    – Don Thousand
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    (6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
    $endgroup$
    – Mauro ALLEGRANZA
    yesterday








2




2




$begingroup$
That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
$endgroup$
– Noah Schweber
yesterday






$begingroup$
That's a decent philosophical reasoning - although I can't speak to its historical accuracy, not being versed in the history myself - but never underestimate the role of sheer pragmatics: proper classes are weird and talking about sets of cardinal (or ordinal) numbers is important, so it is useful for the "number of elements" (and similar notions) of a set to also be a set rather than a class. It just ultimately reduces the "overhead cost" for the arguments we want to make. Again, I'm not versed in the history (hence this isn't an answer), but I suspect this did play a major role in the shift.
$endgroup$
– Noah Schweber
yesterday






2




2




$begingroup$
I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
$endgroup$
– Don Thousand
yesterday




$begingroup$
I think this approach, as Noah points out, fell out of favor when it became very obvious that unrestricted comprehensions are problematic, and classes are in general annoying to work with. So, it's a lot easier simply denoting a set to represent a given cardinality, and forcing any set with the same cardinality to share a bijection, rather than being a member of some class, that we don't even know much about.
$endgroup$
– Don Thousand
yesterday




1




1




$begingroup$
(6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
$endgroup$
– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
yesterday






$begingroup$
(6) "sounds" a little bit different IMO... The original proposal of Frege and Russell was also to solve the philosophical problem of "what numbers really are" (assuming that the question is meaningful...). The current set theory construction aims at defining inside the "universe" of sets a structure that has exactly all the properties of the natural number. From a mathematical point of view this is enough, but form the point of view of Frege and Russell it is quite doubtful to asserts that numbers are conjured out of the empty set.
$endgroup$
– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
yesterday






2




2




$begingroup$
See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
$endgroup$
– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
yesterday




$begingroup$
See Paul Benacerraf, What numbers could not be.
$endgroup$
– Mauro ALLEGRANZA
yesterday










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















10












$begingroup$

The question might be a better fit for HSM.se but, until it's there, my answer won't focus on historical details so much as mathematical motives.




(1) numbers were higher-order properties, not of things , but of sets




Numbers are lots of things. Is the example above worth taking as a definition, axiom or theorem? You can try each approach, but we try to leave as much complicated machinery as possible to the later theorem-proving stage.




(2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes




Which, after $0$, are "proper classes". I won't be terribly specific about that, because the details vary by your choice of set theory. But since we can't have a set of all sets that aren't elements of themselves, we have to say some collections of sets you can imagine aren't sets, and we typically say, ironically enough given the original motive for set theory, that sets are distinguished from proper classes in that they can be elements of classes.



Eventually, we want to define integers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers with the same difference between coordinates, e.g. $-3$ is the set of $(n+3,,n)$ for non-negative integers $n$. But $(a,,b):={{a},,{a,,b}}$ requires $a,,b$ to be elements of things, i.e. sets, so they can't be the enormous equivalence classes proposed in (2).




(3) To identify each number class we would need a "standard" in each class.
(4) But the use requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards.
(5) We choose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost".
(6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard".




A few points:




  • If you think about it, (3) immediately allows us to jump to (6) and thereby obviate (2), regardless of whether you make the observations in (4), (5).

  • Defining $0:={},,Sn:=ncup{n}$ and putting these into a thing called $omega$ with no further elements, and claiming $omega$ is a set, is something we already do in just about every interesting set theory's axiom of infinity (although I imagine some prefer a slightly different formulation). We don't do that because we're trying to solve the problem Russell was thinking about; we do it because a lot of interesting mathematics requires infinities. And that one axiom lets us skip all of (1)-(5) and never do any "philosophy" at all.



(7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function




Oh dear, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself. ;)



Finally, let's note that none of this lets us decide what the equivalent to (1)-(7) would be for infinite sets' sizes. What is the representative set equinumerous to $Bbb N$, for example, or to $Bbb C$? Roughly speaking, it would go like this:




  • (1)/(2) would proceed as before;

  • For (3)-(6)'s choice of cardinals, see here. Long story short, the details vary by the set theory used (and to an extent the model thereof), but that link gives the gist of it;

  • (7)'s a bit trickier, and in some set theories you can't even order all the set sizes!






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday



















5












$begingroup$

The main (unique?) motivation has zero relation with your (4). The definition of numbers as equivalence classes has a very big technical problem: the equivalence classes themselves are "too big", namely, proper classes.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
    $endgroup$
    – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
    yesterday












  • $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday



















4












$begingroup$

The problem is not that the original definition requires the existence of the elements of the standards (Thumb, Index etc.) If we have a reasonable Set Theory, we can always find a set with five elements.



The problem is that the equivalence class so defined is a proper Class, not a Set; and the aim is to construct as much mathematics as possible using Sets only, as constructed using the Axioms that we allow ourselves.



So we define $5$ iteratively as
$$0=emptyset$$
$$1={0}$$
$$2={0,1}$$
$$3={0,1,2}$$
$$4={0,1,2,3}$$
$$5={0,1,2,3,4}$$



which are all well-defined Sets.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$














    Your Answer





    StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
    return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
    StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
    StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
    });
    });
    }, "mathjax-editing");

    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "69"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3178282%2fwhy-has-russells-definition-of-numbers-using-equivalence-classes-been-finally-a%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    10












    $begingroup$

    The question might be a better fit for HSM.se but, until it's there, my answer won't focus on historical details so much as mathematical motives.




    (1) numbers were higher-order properties, not of things , but of sets




    Numbers are lots of things. Is the example above worth taking as a definition, axiom or theorem? You can try each approach, but we try to leave as much complicated machinery as possible to the later theorem-proving stage.




    (2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes




    Which, after $0$, are "proper classes". I won't be terribly specific about that, because the details vary by your choice of set theory. But since we can't have a set of all sets that aren't elements of themselves, we have to say some collections of sets you can imagine aren't sets, and we typically say, ironically enough given the original motive for set theory, that sets are distinguished from proper classes in that they can be elements of classes.



    Eventually, we want to define integers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers with the same difference between coordinates, e.g. $-3$ is the set of $(n+3,,n)$ for non-negative integers $n$. But $(a,,b):={{a},,{a,,b}}$ requires $a,,b$ to be elements of things, i.e. sets, so they can't be the enormous equivalence classes proposed in (2).




    (3) To identify each number class we would need a "standard" in each class.
    (4) But the use requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards.
    (5) We choose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost".
    (6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard".




    A few points:




    • If you think about it, (3) immediately allows us to jump to (6) and thereby obviate (2), regardless of whether you make the observations in (4), (5).

    • Defining $0:={},,Sn:=ncup{n}$ and putting these into a thing called $omega$ with no further elements, and claiming $omega$ is a set, is something we already do in just about every interesting set theory's axiom of infinity (although I imagine some prefer a slightly different formulation). We don't do that because we're trying to solve the problem Russell was thinking about; we do it because a lot of interesting mathematics requires infinities. And that one axiom lets us skip all of (1)-(5) and never do any "philosophy" at all.



    (7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function




    Oh dear, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself. ;)



    Finally, let's note that none of this lets us decide what the equivalent to (1)-(7) would be for infinite sets' sizes. What is the representative set equinumerous to $Bbb N$, for example, or to $Bbb C$? Roughly speaking, it would go like this:




    • (1)/(2) would proceed as before;

    • For (3)-(6)'s choice of cardinals, see here. Long story short, the details vary by the set theory used (and to an extent the model thereof), but that link gives the gist of it;

    • (7)'s a bit trickier, and in some set theories you can't even order all the set sizes!






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday
















    10












    $begingroup$

    The question might be a better fit for HSM.se but, until it's there, my answer won't focus on historical details so much as mathematical motives.




    (1) numbers were higher-order properties, not of things , but of sets




    Numbers are lots of things. Is the example above worth taking as a definition, axiom or theorem? You can try each approach, but we try to leave as much complicated machinery as possible to the later theorem-proving stage.




    (2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes




    Which, after $0$, are "proper classes". I won't be terribly specific about that, because the details vary by your choice of set theory. But since we can't have a set of all sets that aren't elements of themselves, we have to say some collections of sets you can imagine aren't sets, and we typically say, ironically enough given the original motive for set theory, that sets are distinguished from proper classes in that they can be elements of classes.



    Eventually, we want to define integers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers with the same difference between coordinates, e.g. $-3$ is the set of $(n+3,,n)$ for non-negative integers $n$. But $(a,,b):={{a},,{a,,b}}$ requires $a,,b$ to be elements of things, i.e. sets, so they can't be the enormous equivalence classes proposed in (2).




    (3) To identify each number class we would need a "standard" in each class.
    (4) But the use requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards.
    (5) We choose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost".
    (6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard".




    A few points:




    • If you think about it, (3) immediately allows us to jump to (6) and thereby obviate (2), regardless of whether you make the observations in (4), (5).

    • Defining $0:={},,Sn:=ncup{n}$ and putting these into a thing called $omega$ with no further elements, and claiming $omega$ is a set, is something we already do in just about every interesting set theory's axiom of infinity (although I imagine some prefer a slightly different formulation). We don't do that because we're trying to solve the problem Russell was thinking about; we do it because a lot of interesting mathematics requires infinities. And that one axiom lets us skip all of (1)-(5) and never do any "philosophy" at all.



    (7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function




    Oh dear, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself. ;)



    Finally, let's note that none of this lets us decide what the equivalent to (1)-(7) would be for infinite sets' sizes. What is the representative set equinumerous to $Bbb N$, for example, or to $Bbb C$? Roughly speaking, it would go like this:




    • (1)/(2) would proceed as before;

    • For (3)-(6)'s choice of cardinals, see here. Long story short, the details vary by the set theory used (and to an extent the model thereof), but that link gives the gist of it;

    • (7)'s a bit trickier, and in some set theories you can't even order all the set sizes!






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday














    10












    10








    10





    $begingroup$

    The question might be a better fit for HSM.se but, until it's there, my answer won't focus on historical details so much as mathematical motives.




    (1) numbers were higher-order properties, not of things , but of sets




    Numbers are lots of things. Is the example above worth taking as a definition, axiom or theorem? You can try each approach, but we try to leave as much complicated machinery as possible to the later theorem-proving stage.




    (2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes




    Which, after $0$, are "proper classes". I won't be terribly specific about that, because the details vary by your choice of set theory. But since we can't have a set of all sets that aren't elements of themselves, we have to say some collections of sets you can imagine aren't sets, and we typically say, ironically enough given the original motive for set theory, that sets are distinguished from proper classes in that they can be elements of classes.



    Eventually, we want to define integers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers with the same difference between coordinates, e.g. $-3$ is the set of $(n+3,,n)$ for non-negative integers $n$. But $(a,,b):={{a},,{a,,b}}$ requires $a,,b$ to be elements of things, i.e. sets, so they can't be the enormous equivalence classes proposed in (2).




    (3) To identify each number class we would need a "standard" in each class.
    (4) But the use requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards.
    (5) We choose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost".
    (6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard".




    A few points:




    • If you think about it, (3) immediately allows us to jump to (6) and thereby obviate (2), regardless of whether you make the observations in (4), (5).

    • Defining $0:={},,Sn:=ncup{n}$ and putting these into a thing called $omega$ with no further elements, and claiming $omega$ is a set, is something we already do in just about every interesting set theory's axiom of infinity (although I imagine some prefer a slightly different formulation). We don't do that because we're trying to solve the problem Russell was thinking about; we do it because a lot of interesting mathematics requires infinities. And that one axiom lets us skip all of (1)-(5) and never do any "philosophy" at all.



    (7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function




    Oh dear, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself. ;)



    Finally, let's note that none of this lets us decide what the equivalent to (1)-(7) would be for infinite sets' sizes. What is the representative set equinumerous to $Bbb N$, for example, or to $Bbb C$? Roughly speaking, it would go like this:




    • (1)/(2) would proceed as before;

    • For (3)-(6)'s choice of cardinals, see here. Long story short, the details vary by the set theory used (and to an extent the model thereof), but that link gives the gist of it;

    • (7)'s a bit trickier, and in some set theories you can't even order all the set sizes!






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    The question might be a better fit for HSM.se but, until it's there, my answer won't focus on historical details so much as mathematical motives.




    (1) numbers were higher-order properties, not of things , but of sets




    Numbers are lots of things. Is the example above worth taking as a definition, axiom or theorem? You can try each approach, but we try to leave as much complicated machinery as possible to the later theorem-proving stage.




    (2) Numbers are defined as equivalence classes




    Which, after $0$, are "proper classes". I won't be terribly specific about that, because the details vary by your choice of set theory. But since we can't have a set of all sets that aren't elements of themselves, we have to say some collections of sets you can imagine aren't sets, and we typically say, ironically enough given the original motive for set theory, that sets are distinguished from proper classes in that they can be elements of classes.



    Eventually, we want to define integers as equivalence classes of ordered pairs of integers with the same difference between coordinates, e.g. $-3$ is the set of $(n+3,,n)$ for non-negative integers $n$. But $(a,,b):={{a},,{a,,b}}$ requires $a,,b$ to be elements of things, i.e. sets, so they can't be the enormous equivalence classes proposed in (2).




    (3) To identify each number class we would need a "standard" in each class.
    (4) But the use requires us to admit the existence of the elements of these standards.
    (5) We choose as standards sets whose elements exist "at minimal cost".
    (6) We finally abandon the definition of numbers as equivalence classes (with a special element as standard) and define directly each number by its "standard".




    A few points:




    • If you think about it, (3) immediately allows us to jump to (6) and thereby obviate (2), regardless of whether you make the observations in (4), (5).

    • Defining $0:={},,Sn:=ncup{n}$ and putting these into a thing called $omega$ with no further elements, and claiming $omega$ is a set, is something we already do in just about every interesting set theory's axiom of infinity (although I imagine some prefer a slightly different formulation). We don't do that because we're trying to solve the problem Russell was thinking about; we do it because a lot of interesting mathematics requires infinities. And that one axiom lets us skip all of (1)-(5) and never do any "philosophy" at all.



    (7) We finally put this set in order using the successor function




    Oh dear, I seem to have gotten ahead of myself. ;)



    Finally, let's note that none of this lets us decide what the equivalent to (1)-(7) would be for infinite sets' sizes. What is the representative set equinumerous to $Bbb N$, for example, or to $Bbb C$? Roughly speaking, it would go like this:




    • (1)/(2) would proceed as before;

    • For (3)-(6)'s choice of cardinals, see here. Long story short, the details vary by the set theory used (and to an extent the model thereof), but that link gives the gist of it;

    • (7)'s a bit trickier, and in some set theories you can't even order all the set sizes!







    share|cite|improve this answer












    share|cite|improve this answer



    share|cite|improve this answer










    answered yesterday









    J.G.J.G.

    33.1k23251




    33.1k23251








    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday














    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday








    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday




    $begingroup$
    @ J. G - Thanks for this clear and detailed answer.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday











    5












    $begingroup$

    The main (unique?) motivation has zero relation with your (4). The definition of numbers as equivalence classes has a very big technical problem: the equivalence classes themselves are "too big", namely, proper classes.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
      $endgroup$
      – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
      yesterday












    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday
















    5












    $begingroup$

    The main (unique?) motivation has zero relation with your (4). The definition of numbers as equivalence classes has a very big technical problem: the equivalence classes themselves are "too big", namely, proper classes.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
      $endgroup$
      – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
      yesterday












    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday














    5












    5








    5





    $begingroup$

    The main (unique?) motivation has zero relation with your (4). The definition of numbers as equivalence classes has a very big technical problem: the equivalence classes themselves are "too big", namely, proper classes.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    The main (unique?) motivation has zero relation with your (4). The definition of numbers as equivalence classes has a very big technical problem: the equivalence classes themselves are "too big", namely, proper classes.







    share|cite|improve this answer












    share|cite|improve this answer



    share|cite|improve this answer










    answered yesterday









    Martín-Blas Pérez PinillaMartín-Blas Pérez Pinilla

    35.4k42972




    35.4k42972








    • 1




      $begingroup$
      I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
      $endgroup$
      – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
      yesterday












    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday














    • 1




      $begingroup$
      I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
      $endgroup$
      – Eleonore Saint James
      yesterday










    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
      $endgroup$
      – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
      yesterday












    • $begingroup$
      @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
      $endgroup$
      – TonyK
      yesterday








    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday




    $begingroup$
    I don't know why this got downvoted. It cuts to the heart of the question.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday












    $begingroup$
    @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday




    $begingroup$
    @ TonyK @ Martin Bias - What was downvoted? Personnaly, I upvote your both answers.
    $endgroup$
    – Eleonore Saint James
    yesterday












    $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
    $endgroup$
    – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
    yesterday






    $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames, my answer as two upvotes (you, TonyK) and a downvote. The other upvote of TonyK is also mine.
    $endgroup$
    – Martín-Blas Pérez Pinilla
    yesterday














    $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday




    $begingroup$
    @EleonoreSaintJames: Once you reach a certain reputation, you can click on the vote counter to see the number of upvotes and downvotes. This answer currently has two upvotes (from you and me!) and one downvote.
    $endgroup$
    – TonyK
    yesterday











    4












    $begingroup$

    The problem is not that the original definition requires the existence of the elements of the standards (Thumb, Index etc.) If we have a reasonable Set Theory, we can always find a set with five elements.



    The problem is that the equivalence class so defined is a proper Class, not a Set; and the aim is to construct as much mathematics as possible using Sets only, as constructed using the Axioms that we allow ourselves.



    So we define $5$ iteratively as
    $$0=emptyset$$
    $$1={0}$$
    $$2={0,1}$$
    $$3={0,1,2}$$
    $$4={0,1,2,3}$$
    $$5={0,1,2,3,4}$$



    which are all well-defined Sets.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$


















      4












      $begingroup$

      The problem is not that the original definition requires the existence of the elements of the standards (Thumb, Index etc.) If we have a reasonable Set Theory, we can always find a set with five elements.



      The problem is that the equivalence class so defined is a proper Class, not a Set; and the aim is to construct as much mathematics as possible using Sets only, as constructed using the Axioms that we allow ourselves.



      So we define $5$ iteratively as
      $$0=emptyset$$
      $$1={0}$$
      $$2={0,1}$$
      $$3={0,1,2}$$
      $$4={0,1,2,3}$$
      $$5={0,1,2,3,4}$$



      which are all well-defined Sets.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$
















        4












        4








        4





        $begingroup$

        The problem is not that the original definition requires the existence of the elements of the standards (Thumb, Index etc.) If we have a reasonable Set Theory, we can always find a set with five elements.



        The problem is that the equivalence class so defined is a proper Class, not a Set; and the aim is to construct as much mathematics as possible using Sets only, as constructed using the Axioms that we allow ourselves.



        So we define $5$ iteratively as
        $$0=emptyset$$
        $$1={0}$$
        $$2={0,1}$$
        $$3={0,1,2}$$
        $$4={0,1,2,3}$$
        $$5={0,1,2,3,4}$$



        which are all well-defined Sets.






        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        The problem is not that the original definition requires the existence of the elements of the standards (Thumb, Index etc.) If we have a reasonable Set Theory, we can always find a set with five elements.



        The problem is that the equivalence class so defined is a proper Class, not a Set; and the aim is to construct as much mathematics as possible using Sets only, as constructed using the Axioms that we allow ourselves.



        So we define $5$ iteratively as
        $$0=emptyset$$
        $$1={0}$$
        $$2={0,1}$$
        $$3={0,1,2}$$
        $$4={0,1,2,3}$$
        $$5={0,1,2,3,4}$$



        which are all well-defined Sets.







        share|cite|improve this answer












        share|cite|improve this answer



        share|cite|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        TonyKTonyK

        44k358137




        44k358137






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3178282%2fwhy-has-russells-definition-of-numbers-using-equivalence-classes-been-finally-a%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            is 'sed' thread safeWhat should someone know about using Python scripts in the shell?Nexenta bash script uses...

            How do i solve the “ No module named 'mlxtend' ” issue on Jupyter?

            Pilgersdorf Inhaltsverzeichnis Geografie | Geschichte | Bevölkerungsentwicklung | Politik | Kultur...