Milner–Rado paradox

In set theory, a branch of mathematics, the Milner Rado paradox, found by Eric Charles Milner and Richard Rado (1965), states that every ordinal number less than the successor of some cardinal number can be written as the union of sets X1,X2,... where Xn is of order type at most κn for n a positive integer.

Proof

The proof is by transfinite induction. Let be a limit ordinal (the induction is trivial for successor ordinals), and for each , let be a partition of satisfying the requirements of the theorem.

Fix an increasing sequence cofinal in with .

Note .

Define:

Observe that:

and so .

Let be the order type of . As for the order types, clearly .

Noting that the sets form a consecutive sequence of ordinal intervals, and that each is a tail segment of we get that:

gollark: This does seem slightly weird and broken.
gollark: ```File and Directory Access pathlib — Object-oriented filesystem paths os.path — Common pathname manipulations fileinput — Iterate over lines from multiple input streams stat — Interpreting stat() results filecmp — File and Directory Comparisons tempfile — Generate temporary files and directories glob — Unix style pathname pattern expansion fnmatch — Unix filename pattern matching linecache — Random access to text lines shutil — High-level file operations macpath — Mac OS 9 path manipulation functions```
gollark: https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html
gollark: Also, the standard library is inconsistent and weird.
gollark: I think that Python has just become too bloated with random junk.

References

  • Milner, E. C.; Rado, R. (1965), "The pigeon-hole principle for ordinal numbers", Proc. London Math. Soc., Series 3, 15: 750–768, doi:10.1112/plms/s3-15.1.750, MR 0190003
  • How to prove Milner-Rado Paradox? - Mathematics Stack Exchange


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