Cardinal Number
In common usage, a cardinal number is a number used in counting (a counting number), such as 1, 2, 3, ....
In formal set theory, a cardinal number (also called "the cardinality") is a type of number defined in such a way that any method
of counting sets using it gives the same result. (This is
not true for the ordinal numbers.) In fact, the
cardinal numbers are obtained by collecting all ordinal
numbers which are obtainable by counting a given set. A set has (aleph-0)
members if it can be put into a one-to-one
correspondence with the finite ordinal numbers.
The cardinality of a set is also frequently referred to as the "power"
of a set (Moore 1982, Dauben 1990, Suppes 1972).
In Georg Cantor's original notation, the symbol for a set annotated with a single overbar
indicated
stripped of any structure besides order, hence
it represented the order type of the set. A double
overbar
then indicated stripping the order
from the set and thus indicated the cardinal number of the set. However, in modern
notation, the symbol
is used to denote the cardinal number
of set.
Cantor, the father of modern set theory, noticed that while the ordinal numbers ,
, ... were
bigger than omega in the sense of order, they were not bigger in the sense of equipollence. This led him to study what would come
to be called cardinal numbers. He called the ordinals
,
, ... that
are equipollent to the integers "the second number class" (as opposed to
the finite ordinals, which he called the "first number class"). Cantor
showed
1. The second number class is bigger than the first.
2. There is no class bigger than the first number class and smaller than the second.
3. The class of real numbers is bigger than the first number class.
One of the first serious mathematical definitions of cardinal was the one devised by Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell, who defined a cardinal number as the set of
all sets equipollent to
. (Moore 1982, p. 153;
Suppes 1972, p. 109). Unfortunately, the objects produced by this definition
are not sets in the sense of Zermelo-Fraenkel
set theory, but rather "proper classes"
in the terminology of von Neumann.
Tarski (1924) proposed to instead define a cardinal number by stating that every set is associated with a cardinal number
, and two sets
and
have the same cardinal
number iff they are equipollent
(Moore 1982, pp. 52 and 214; Rubin 1967, p. 266; Suppes 1972, p. 111).
The problem is that this definition requires a special axiom to guarantee that cardinals
exist.
A. P. Morse and Dana Scott defined cardinal number by letting be any set, then
calling
the set of all sets equipollent
to
and of least possible rank
(Rubin 1967, p. 270).
It is possible to associate cardinality with a specific set, but the process required either the axiom of foundation or the axiom of choice. However, these are two of the more controversial Zermelo-Fraenkel axioms. With the axiom of choice, the cardinals can be enumerated through the ordinals. In fact, the two can be put into one-to-one correspondence. The axiom of choice implies that every set can be well ordered and can therefore be associated with an ordinal number.
This leads to the definition of cardinal number for a set as the least ordinal
number
such that
and
are equipollent.
In this model, the cardinal numbers are just the initial
ordinals. This definition obviously depends on the axiom
of choice, because if the axiom of choice is
not true, then there are sets that cannot be well ordered. Cantor believed that every
set could be well ordered and used this correspondence to define the
s ("alephs").
For any ordinal number
,
.
An inaccessible cardinal cannot be expressed in terms of a smaller number of smaller cardinals.