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Mathematical proposition equivalent to the axiom of choice From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zorn's lemma, also known as the Kuratowski–Zorn lemma, is a proposition of set theory. It states that a partially ordered set containing upper bounds for every chain (that is, every totally ordered subset) necessarily contains at least one maximal element.
The lemma was proved (assuming the axiom of choice) by Kazimierz Kuratowski in 1922 and independently by Max Zorn in 1935.[2] It occurs in the proofs of several theorems of crucial importance, for instance the Hahn–Banach theorem in functional analysis, the theorem that every vector space has a basis,[3] Tychonoff's theorem in topology stating that every product of compact spaces is compact, and the theorems in abstract algebra that in a ring with identity every proper ideal is contained in a maximal ideal and that every field has an algebraic closure.[4]
Zorn's lemma is equivalent to the well-ordering theorem and also to the axiom of choice, in the sense that within ZF (Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory without the axiom of choice) any one of the three is sufficient to prove the other two.[5] An earlier formulation of Zorn's lemma is the Hausdorff maximal principle which states that every totally ordered subset of a given partially ordered set is contained in a maximal totally ordered subset of that partially ordered set.[6]
To prove the existence of a mathematical object that can be viewed as a maximal element in some partially ordered set in some way, one can try proving the existence of such an object by assuming there is no maximal element and using transfinite induction and the assumptions of the situation to get a contradiction. Zorn's lemma tidies up the conditions a situation needs to satisfy in order for such an argument to work and enables mathematicians to not have to repeat the transfinite induction argument by hand each time, but just check the conditions of Zorn's lemma.
If you are building a mathematical object in stages and find that (i) you have not finished even after infinitely many stages, and (ii) there seems to be nothing to stop you continuing to build, then Zorn’s lemma may well be able to help you.
Preliminary notions:
Zorn's lemma can then be stated as:
Zorn's lemma — Suppose a partially ordered set P has the property that every chain in P has an upper bound in P. Then the set P contains at least one maximal element.
Variants of this formulation are sometimes used, such as requiring that the set P and its chains be non-empty.[8]
Zorn's lemma (for non-empty sets) — Suppose a non-empty partially ordered set P has the property that every non-empty chain has an upper bound in P. Then the set P contains at least one maximal element.
Although this formulation appears to be formally weaker (since it places on P the additional condition of being non-empty, but obtains the same conclusion about P), in fact the two formulations are equivalent: To verify this, suppose first that P satisfies the condition that every chain in P has an upper bound in P. Then the empty subset of P is a chain, as it satisfies the definition vacuously; so the hypothesis implies that this subset must have an upper bound in P, and this upper bound shows that P is in fact non-empty. Conversely, if P is assumed to be non-empty and satisfies the hypothesis that every non-empty chain has an upper bound in P, then P also satisfies the condition that every chain has an upper bound, as an arbitrary element of P serves as an upper bound for the empty chain (that is, the empty subset viewed as a chain).
The difference may seem subtle, but in many proofs that invoke Zorn's lemma, one takes unions of some sort to produce an upper bound, and so the case of the empty chain may be overlooked; that is, the verification that all chains have upper bounds may have to deal with empty and non-empty chains separately. So, many authors prefer to verify the non-emptiness of the set P rather than deal with the empty chain in the general argument.[9]
Zorn's lemma can be used to show that every vector space V has a basis.[10]
If V = {0}, then the empty set is a basis for V. Now, suppose that V ≠ {0}. Let P be the set consisting of all linearly independent subsets of V. Since V is not the zero vector space, there exists a nonzero element v of V, so P contains the linearly independent subset {v}. Furthermore, P is partially ordered by set inclusion (see inclusion order). Finding a maximal linearly independent subset of V is the same as finding a maximal element in P.
To apply Zorn's lemma, take a chain T in P (that is, T is a subset of P that is totally ordered). If T is the empty set, then {v} is an upper bound for T in P. Suppose then that T is non-empty. We need to show that T has an upper bound, that is, there exists a linearly independent subset B of V containing all the members of T.
Take B to be the union of all the sets in T. We wish to show that B is an upper bound for T in P. To do this, it suffices to show that B is a linearly independent subset of V.
Suppose otherwise, that B is not linearly independent. Then there exists vectors v1, v2, ..., vk ∈ B and scalars a1, a2, ..., ak, not all zero, such that
Since B is the union of all the sets in T, there are some sets S1, S2, ..., Sk ∈ T such that vi ∈ Si for every i = 1, 2, ..., k. As T is totally ordered, one of the sets S1, S2, ..., Sk must contain the others, so there is some set Si that contains all of v1, v2, ..., vk. This tells us there is a linearly dependent set of vectors in Si, contradicting that Si is linearly independent (because it is a member of P).
The hypothesis of Zorn's lemma has been checked, and thus there is a maximal element in P, in other words a maximal linearly independent subset B of V.
Finally, we show that B is indeed a basis of V. It suffices to show that B is a spanning set of V. Suppose for the sake of contradiction that B is not spanning. Then there exists some v ∈ V not covered by the span of B. This says that B ∪ {v} is a linearly independent subset of V that is larger than B, contradicting the maximality of B. Therefore, B is a spanning set of V, and thus, a basis of V.
Zorn's lemma can be used to show that every nontrivial ring R with unity contains a maximal ideal.
Let P be the set consisting of all proper ideals in R (that is, all ideals in R except R itself). Since R is non-trivial, the set P contains the trivial ideal {0}. Furthermore, P is partially ordered by set inclusion. Finding a maximal ideal in R is the same as finding a maximal element in P.
To apply Zorn's lemma, take a chain T in P. If T is empty, then the trivial ideal {0} is an upper bound for T in P. Assume then that T is non-empty. It is necessary to show that T has an upper bound, that is, there exists an ideal I ⊆ R containing all the members of T but still smaller than R (otherwise it would not be a proper ideal, so it is not in P).
Take I to be the union of all the ideals in T. We wish to show that I is an upper bound for T in P. We will first show that I is an ideal of R. For I to be an ideal, it must satisfy three conditions:
#1 - I is a nonempty subset of R.
Because T contains at least one element, and that element contains at least 0, the union I contains at least 0 and is not empty. Every element of T is a subset of R, so the union I only consists of elements in R.
#2 - For every x, y ∈ I, the sum x + y is in I.
Suppose x and y are elements of I. Then there exist two ideals J, K ∈ T such that x is an element of J and y is an element of K. Since T is totally ordered, we know that J ⊆ K or K ⊆ J. Without loss of generality, assume the first case. Both x and y are members of the ideal K, therefore their sum x + y is a member of K, which shows that x + y is a member of I.
#3 - For every r ∈ R and every x ∈ I, the product rx is in I.
Suppose x is an element of I. Then there exists an ideal J ∈ T such that x is in J. If r ∈ R, then rx is an element of J and hence an element of I. Thus, I is an ideal in R.
Now, we show that I is a proper ideal. An ideal is equal to R if and only if it contains 1. (It is clear that if it is R then it contains 1; on the other hand, if it contains 1 and r is an arbitrary element of R, then r1 = r is an element of the ideal, and so the ideal is equal to R.) So, if I were equal to R, then it would contain 1, and that means one of the members of T would contain 1 and would thus be equal to R – but R is explicitly excluded from P.
The hypothesis of Zorn's lemma has been checked, and thus there is a maximal element in P, in other words a maximal ideal in R.
A sketch of the proof of Zorn's lemma follows, assuming the axiom of choice. Suppose the lemma is false. Then there exists a partially ordered set, or poset, P such that every totally ordered subset has an upper bound, and that for every element in P there is another element bigger than it. For every totally ordered subset T we may then define a bigger element b(T), because T has an upper bound, and that upper bound has a bigger element. To actually define the function b, we need to employ the axiom of choice (explicitly: let , that is, the set of upper bounds for T. The axiom of choice furnishes ).
Using the function b, we are going to define elements a0 < a1 < a2 < a3 < ... < aω < aω+1 <…, in P. This uncountable sequence is really long: the indices are not just the natural numbers, but all ordinals. In fact, the sequence is too long for the set P; there are too many ordinals (a proper class), more than there are elements in any set (in other words, given any set of ordinals, there exists a larger ordinal), and the set P will be exhausted before long and then we will run into the desired contradiction.
The ai are defined by transfinite recursion: we pick a0 in P arbitrary (this is possible, since P contains an upper bound for the empty set and is thus not empty) and for any other ordinal w we set aw = b({av : v < w}). Because the av are totally ordered, this is a well-founded definition.
The above proof can be formulated without explicitly referring to ordinals by considering the initial segments {av : v < w} as subsets of P. Such sets can be easily characterized as well-ordered chains S ⊆ P where each x ∈ S satisfies x = b({y ∈ S : y < x}). Contradiction is reached by noting that we can always find a "next" initial segment either by taking the union of all such S (corresponding to the limit ordinal case) or by appending b(S) to the "last" S (corresponding to the successor ordinal case).[11]
This proof shows that actually a slightly stronger version of Zorn's lemma is true:
Lemma — If P is a poset in which every well-ordered subset has an upper bound, and if x is any element of P, then P has a maximal element greater than or equal to x. That is, there is a maximal element which is comparable to x.
Alternatively, one can use the same proof for the Hausdorff maximal principle. This is the proof given for example in Halmos' Naive Set Theory or in § Proof below.
The basic idea of the proof is to reduce the proof to proving the following weak form of Zorn's lemma:
Lemma — Let be a set consisting of subsets of some fixed set such that satisfies the following properties:
Then has a maximal element with respect to set inclusion.
(Note that, strictly speaking, (1) is redundant since (2) implies the empty set is in .) Note the above is a weak form of Zorn's lemma since Zorn's lemma says in particular that any set of subsets satisfying the above (1) and (2) has a maximal element. The point is that, conversely, Zorn's lemma follows from this weak form.[12] Indeed, let be the set of all chains in . Then it satisfies all of the above properties (it is nonempty since the empty subset is a chain.) Thus, by the above weak form, we find a maximal element in ; i.e., a maximal chain in . By the hypothesis of Zorn's lemma, has an upper bound in . Then this is a maximal element since if , then is larger than and so . Thus, .
The proof of the weak form is given in Hausdorff maximal principle#Proof. Indeed, the existence of a maximal chain is exactly the assertion of the Hausdorff maximal principle.
The same proof also shows the following equivalent variant of Zorn's lemma:[13]
Lemma — Let be a partially ordered set in which each chain has a least upper bound in . Then has a maximal element.
Indeed, trivially, Zorn's lemma implies the above lemma. Conversely, the above lemma implies the aforementioned weak form of Zorn's lemma, since a union gives a least upper bound.
A proof that Zorn's lemma implies the axiom of choice illustrates a typical application of Zorn's lemma.[14] (The structure of the proof is exactly the same as the one for the Hahn–Banach theorem.)
Given a set of nonempty sets and its union (which exists by the axiom of union), we want to show there is a function
such that for each . For that end, consider the set
It is partially ordered by extension; i.e., if and only if is the restriction of . If is a chain in , then we can define the function on the union by setting when . This is well-defined since if , then is the restriction of . The function is also an element of and is a common extension of all 's. Thus, we have shown that each chain in has an upper bound in . Hence, by Zorn's lemma, there is a maximal element in that is defined on some . We want to show . Suppose otherwise; then there is a set . As is nonempty, it contains an element . We can then extend to a function by setting and . (Note this step does not need the axiom of choice.) The function is in and , a contradiction to the maximality of .
Essentially the same proof also shows that Zorn's lemma implies the well-ordering theorem: take to be the set of all well-ordered subsets of a given set and then shows a maximal element of is .[15]
The Hausdorff maximal principle is an early statement similar to Zorn's lemma.
Kazimierz Kuratowski proved in 1922[16] a version of the lemma close to its modern formulation (it applies to sets ordered by inclusion and closed under unions of well-ordered chains). Essentially the same formulation (weakened by using arbitrary chains, not just well-ordered) was independently given by Max Zorn in 1935,[17] who proposed it as a new axiom of set theory replacing the well-ordering theorem, exhibited some of its applications in algebra, and promised to show its equivalence with the axiom of choice in another paper, which never appeared.
The name "Zorn's lemma" appears to be due to John Tukey, who used it in his book Convergence and Uniformity in Topology in 1940. Bourbaki's Théorie des Ensembles of 1939 refers to a similar maximal principle as "le théorème de Zorn".[18] The name "Kuratowski–Zorn lemma" prevails in Poland and Russia.
Zorn's lemma is equivalent (in ZF) to three main results:
A well-known joke alluding to this equivalency (which may defy human intuition) is attributed to Jerry Bona: "The Axiom of Choice is obviously true, the well-ordering principle obviously false, and who can tell about Zorn's lemma?"[19]
Zorn's lemma is also equivalent to the strong completeness theorem of first-order logic.[20]
Moreover, Zorn's lemma (or one of its equivalent forms) implies some major results in other mathematical areas. For example,
In this sense, Zorn's lemma is a powerful tool, applicable to many areas of mathematics.
A weakened form of Zorn's lemma can be proven from ZF + DC (Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice replaced by the axiom of dependent choice). Zorn's lemma can be expressed straightforwardly by observing that the set having no maximal element would be equivalent to stating that the set's ordering relation would be entire, which would allow us to apply the axiom of dependent choice to construct a countable chain. As a result, any partially ordered set with exclusively finite chains must have a maximal element.[25]
More generally, strengthening the axiom of dependent choice to higher ordinals allows us to generalize the statement in the previous paragraph to higher cardinalities.[25] In the limit where we allow arbitrarily large ordinals, we recover the proof of the full Zorn's lemma using the axiom of choice in the preceding section.
The 1970 film Zorns Lemma is named after the lemma.
The lemma was referenced on The Simpsons in the episode "Bart's New Friend".[26]
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