History of Set Theory: Prepared By: Jeron B. Mina MS Mathematics Education
History of Set Theory: Prepared By: Jeron B. Mina MS Mathematics Education
History of Set Theory: Prepared By: Jeron B. Mina MS Mathematics Education
THEORY
Prepared by: Jeron B. Mina
MS Mathematics Education
Who is
Georg Cantor?
Real Name: Georg Ferdinand Ludwig
Philipp Cantor
Born: March 3, 1845 (Saint
Petersburg, Russian Empire
Nationality: German
Alma Mater: Swiss Federal Polytechnic
University of Berlin
Spouse: Vally Guttman
Died: January 6, 1918
(age of 72 – due to fatal heart attack)
• The idea of infinity had been
the subject of deep thought
from the time of the Greeks.
Leopold Kronecker
• Cantor was tempted to withdraw the
paper but Dedekind persuaded Cantor
not to withdraw it and Weierstrass
supported publication.
Karl Weierstrass
Felix Bernstein
Ernst Schröder
• In 1897 the first published paradox appeared,
published by Cesare Burali-Forti.
Some of the impact of this paradox was
lost since Burali-Forti got the definition
of a well-ordered set wrong!
• However, even if the definition was
corrected, the paradox remained. It basically
revolves round the set of all ordinal numbers.
The ordinal number of the set of all
Cesare Burali-Forti
Beppo Levi
Kurt Gödel
• Russell's paradox had undermined the whole of mathematics in
Frege's words.
Russell, trying to repair the damage, made an attempt to
put mathematics back onto an logical basis in his major
work Principia Mathematica written with Whitehead.
This work attempts to reduce the foundations of
mathematics to logic and was extremely influential.
However the method of avoiding the paradoxes by
introducing a 'theory of types' made it impossible to say
that a class was or was not a member of itself. It did not
seem a very satisfactory way around the problems and
others sought different ways.
• Zermelo in 1908 was the first to attempt
an axiomatization of set theory.
Many other mathematicians attempted
to axiomatize set theory.
Fraenkel, von Neumann, Bernays and
Gödel are all important figures in this
development.
Gödel showed the limitations of any
axiomatic theory and the aims of many Ernst Zermelo
mathematicians such as Frege and
Hilbert could never be achieved.
• In 1922, Abraham A. Fraenkel improved
Zermelo’s Theorem, thus making it
Zarmelo-Fraenkel Theory of Sets. This
Theory is composed of nine axioms defining
the basic concepts of set theory.
• Nowadays, mathematicians consider
Zermelo-Fraenkel Theory of sets as either
ZF (Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory, omitting
the Axiom of Choice) or ZFC (Zermelo-
Fraenkel set theory, extended to include the
Abraham A. Fraenkel
Axiom of Choice).
References:
• School of Mathematics and Statistics (n.d.). Biographies. MacTutor. Retrieved
from https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/
• Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2014). Set theory. Retrieved from
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/set-theory/#:~:text=Set%20theory%2C%20as%2
0a%20separate,counted%20using%20the%20natural%20numbers
.
• Najera, J. (2019). Set Theory - History and Overview. Retrieved from
https://towardsdatascience.com/set-theory-history-overview-c98bac98f99c
• Pintor, C. (1932). A book of Set Theory. Retrieved from
http://matematicas.uis.edu.co/adrialba/sites/default/files/SetTheoryDover-%20Cha
rles%20C%20Pinter.pdf
• Johnson, P. (1970). THE EARLY BEGINNINGS OF SET THEORY. The
Mathematics Teacher, 63(8), 690-692. Retrieved from
http://www.jstor.org/stable/27958491
• Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2007). The Early Development of Set
theory. Retrieved from https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/settheory-early/
• School of Mathematics and Statistics (n.d.). A History of Set theory. Retrieved
from
https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Beginnings_of_set_theory/