Naive Set Theory

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Springer Science & Business Media, Jan 16, 1998 - Mathematics - 104 pages
Every mathematician agrees that every mathematician must know some set theory; the disagreement begins in trying to decide how much is some. This book contains my answer to that question. The purpose of the book is to tell the beginning student of advanced mathematics the basic set theoretic facts of life, and to do so with the minimum of philosophical discourse and logical formalism. The point of view throughout is that of a prospective mathematician anxious to study groups, or integrals, or manifolds. From this point of view the concepts and methods of this book are merely some of the standard mathematical tools; the expert specialist will find nothing new here. Scholarly bibliographical credits and references are out of place in a purely expository book such as this one. The student who gets interested in set theory for its own sake should know, however, that there is much more to the subject than there is in this book. One of the most beautiful sources of set-theoretic wisdom is still Hausdorff's Set theory. A recent and highly readable addition to the literature, with an extensive and up-to-date bibliography, is Axiomatic set theory by Suppes.
 

Contents

II
1
III
4
IV
8
V
12
VI
17
VII
22
VIII
26
IX
30
XVI
59
XVII
62
XVIII
66
XIX
70
XX
74
XXI
78
XXII
81
XXIII
86

X
34
XI
38
XII
42
XIII
46
XIV
50
XV
54
XXIV
90
XXV
94
XXVI
99
XXVII
102
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