Kripke–Platek set theory


The Kripke–Platek set theory, pronounced, is an axiomatic set theory developed by Saul Kripke and Richard Platek.
KP is considerably weaker than Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, and can be thought of as roughly the predicative part of ZFC. The consistency strength of KP with an axiom of infinity is given by the Bachmann–Howard ordinal. Unlike ZFC, KP does not include the power set axiom, and KP includes only limited forms of the axiom of separation and axiom of replacement from ZFC. These restrictions on the axioms of KP lead to close connections between KP, generalized recursion theory, and the theory of admissible ordinals.

The axioms of KP

Here, a Σ0, or Π0, or Δ0 formula is one all of whose quantifiers are bounded. This means any quantification is the form or
These axioms are weaker than ZFC as they exclude the axioms of powerset, choice, and sometimes infinity. Also the axioms of separation and collection here are weaker than the corresponding axioms in ZFC because the formulas φ used in these are limited to bounded quantifiers only.
The axiom of induction in the context of KP is stronger than the usual axiom of regularity, which amounts to applying induction to the complement of a set. Not adopting Regularity or the Axiom of Choice, KP can be studied as a constructive set theory by dropping the law of excluded middle, without changing any axioms.

Proof that Cartesian products exist

Theorem:
If A and B are sets, then there is a set A×B which consists of all ordered pairs of elements a of A and b of B.
Proof:
The set and the set both exist by the axiom of pairing. Thus
exists by the axiom of pairing as well.
A possible Δ0 formula expressing that p stands for is:
Thus a superset of A× = exists by the axiom of collection.
Denote the formula for p above by. Then the following formula is also Δ0
Thus A× itself exists by the axiom of separation.
If v is intended to stand for A×, then a Δ0 formula expressing that is:
Thus a superset of exists by the axiom of collection.
Putting in front of that last formula and we get from the axiom of separation that the set itself exists.
Finally, A×B = exists by the axiom of union.
QED

Admissible sets

A set is called admissible if it is transitive and is a model of Kripke–Platek set theory.
An ordinal number α is called an admissible ordinal if Lα is an admissible set.
The ordinal α is an admissible ordinal if and only if α is a limit ordinal and there does not exist a γ < α for which there is a Σ1 mapping from γ onto α. If M is a standard model of KP, then the set of ordinals in M is an admissible ordinal.
If Lα is a standard model of KP set theory without the axiom of Σ0-collection, then it is said to be an "amenable set".