Axiom of infinity


In axiomatic set theory and the branches of mathematics and philosophy that use it, the axiom of infinity is one of the axioms of Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory. It guarantees the existence of at least one infinite set, namely a set containing the natural numbers. It was first published by Ernst Zermelo as part of his set theory in 1908.

Formal statement

In the formal language of the Zermelo–Fraenkel axioms, the axiom reads:
In words, there is a set I, such that the empty set is in I, and such that whenever any x is a member of I, the set formed by taking the union of x with its singleton is also a member of I. Such a set is sometimes called an inductive set.

Interpretation and consequences

This axiom is closely related to the von Neumann construction of the natural numbers in set theory, in which the successor of x is defined as x ∪. If x is a set, then it follows from the other axioms of set theory that this successor is also a uniquely defined set. Successors are used to define the usual set-theoretic encoding of the natural numbers. In this encoding, zero is the empty set:
The number 1 is the successor of 0:
Likewise, 2 is the successor of 1:
and so on. A consequence of this definition is that every natural number is equal to the set of all preceding natural numbers.
This construction forms the natural numbers. However, the other axioms are insufficient to prove the existence of the set of all natural numbers. Therefore, its existence is taken as an axiom—the axiom of infinity. This axiom asserts that there is a set I that contains 0 and is closed under the operation of taking the successor; that is, for each element of I, the successor of that element is also in I.
Thus the essence of the axiom is:
The axiom of infinity is also one of the von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel axioms.

Extracting the natural numbers from the infinite set

The infinite set I is a superset of the natural numbers. To show that the natural numbers themselves constitute a set, the axiom schema of specification can be applied to remove unwanted elements, leaving the set N of all natural numbers. This set is unique by the axiom of extensionality.
To extract the natural numbers, we need a definition of which sets are natural numbers. The natural numbers can be defined in a way which does not assume any axioms except the axiom of extensionality and the axiom of induction—a natural number is either zero or a successor and each of its elements is either zero or a successor of another of its elements. In formal language, the definition says:
Or, even more formally:

Alternative method

An alternative method is the following. Let be the formula that says "x is inductive"; i.e.. Informally, what we will do is take the intersection of all inductive sets. More formally, we wish to prove the existence of a unique set such that
For existence, we will use the Axiom of Infinity combined with the Axiom schema of specification. Let be an inductive set guaranteed by the Axiom of Infinity. Then we use the Axiom Schema of Specification to define our set - i.e. is the set of all elements of which happen also to be elements of every other inductive set. This clearly satisfies the hypothesis of, since if, then is in every inductive set, and if is in every inductive set, it is in particular in, so it must also be in.
For uniqueness, first note that any set which satisfies is itself inductive, since 0 is in all inductive sets, and if an element is in all inductive sets, then by the inductive property so is its successor. Thus if there were another set which satisfied we would have that since is inductive, and since is inductive. Thus. Let denote this unique element.
This definition is convenient because the principle of induction immediately follows: If is inductive, then also, so that.
Both these methods produce systems which satisfy the axioms of second-order arithmetic, since the axiom of power set allows us to quantify over the power set of, as in second-order logic. Thus they both completely determine isomorphic systems, and since they are isomorphic under the identity map, they must in fact be equal.

An apparently weaker version

Some old texts use an apparently weaker version of the axiom of infinity, to wit
This says that there is an element in x and for every element y of x there is another element of x which is a strict superset of y. This implies that x is an infinite set without saying much about its structure. However, with the help of the other axioms of ZF, we can show that this implies the existence of ω. First, if we take the powerset of any infinite set x, then that powerset will contain elements which are subsets of x of every finite cardinality. Proving the existence of those finite subsets may require either the axiom of separation or the axioms of pairing and union. Then we can apply the axiom of replacement to replace each element of that powerset of x by the initial ordinal number of the same cardinality. The result will be an infinite set of ordinals. Then we can apply the axiom of union to that to get an ordinal greater than or equal to ω.

Independence

The axiom of infinity cannot be proved from the other axioms of ZFC if they are consistent.
The negation of the axiom of infinity cannot be derived from the rest of the axioms of ZFC, if they are consistent. We believe this, but cannot prove it.
Indeed, using the Von Neumann universe, we can build a model of ZFC – Infinity + ¬Infinity. It is, the class of hereditarily finite sets, with the inherited membership relation. Note that if the axiom of the empty set is not taken as a part of this system, then the empty domain also satisfies ZFC – Infinity + ¬Infinity, as all of its axioms are universally quantified, and thus trivially satisfied if no set exists.
The cardinality of the set of natural numbers, aleph null, has many of the properties of a large cardinal. Thus the axiom of infinity is sometimes regarded as the first large cardinal axiom, and conversely large cardinal axioms are sometimes called stronger axioms of infinity.