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Empty set

In mathematics, the empty set is the unique set having no elements; its size or cardinality (count of elements in a set) is zero.[1] Some axiomatic set theories ensure that the empty set exists by including an axiom of empty set, while in other theories, its existence can be deduced. Many possible properties of sets are vacuously true for the empty set.

The empty set is the set containing no elements.

Any set other than the empty set is called non-empty.

In some textbooks and popularizations, the empty set is referred to as the "null set".[1] However, null set is a distinct notion within the context of measure theory, in which it describes a set of measure zero (which is not necessarily empty). The empty set may also be called the void set.

Notation Edit

 
A symbol for the empty set

Common notations for the empty set include "{ }", " ", and "∅". The latter two symbols were introduced by the Bourbaki group (specifically André Weil) in 1939, inspired by the letter Ø in the Danish and Norwegian alphabets.[2] In the past, "0" was occasionally used as a symbol for the empty set, but this is now considered to be an improper use of notation.[3]

The symbol ∅ is available at Unicode point U+2205.[4] It can be coded in HTML as ∅ and as ∅. It can be coded in LaTeX as \varnothing. The symbol   is coded in LaTeX as \emptyset.

When writing in languages such as Danish and Norwegian, where the empty set character may be confused with the alphabetic letter Ø (as when using the symbol in linguistics), the Unicode character U+29B0 REVERSED EMPTY SET ⦰ may be used instead.[5]

Properties Edit

In standard axiomatic set theory, by the principle of extensionality, two sets are equal if they have the same elements (that is, neither of them has an element not in the other). As a result, there can be only one set with no elements, hence the usage of "the empty set" rather than "an empty set".

The empty set has the following properties:

  • Its only subset is the empty set itself:
     
  • The power set of the empty set is the set containing only the empty set:
     
  • The number of elements of the empty set (i.e., its cardinality) is zero:
     

For any set A:

  • The empty set is a subset of A:
     
  • The union of A with the empty set is A:
     
  • The intersection of A with the empty set is the empty set:
     
  • The Cartesian product of A and the empty set is the empty set:
     

For any property P:

  • For every element of  , the property P holds (vacuous truth).
  • There is no element of   for which the property P holds.

Conversely, if for some property P and some set V, the following two statements hold:

  • For every element of V the property P holds
  • There is no element of V for which the property P holds

then  

By the definition of subset, the empty set is a subset of any set A. That is, every element x of   belongs to A. Indeed, if it were not true that every element of   is in A, then there would be at least one element of   that is not present in A. Since there are no elements of   at all, there is no element of   that is not in A. Any statement that begins "for every element of  " is not making any substantive claim; it is a vacuous truth. This is often paraphrased as "everything is true of the elements of the empty set."

In the usual set-theoretic definition of natural numbers, zero is modelled by the empty set.

Operations on the empty set Edit

When speaking of the sum of the elements of a finite set, one is inevitably led to the convention that the sum of the elements of the empty set is zero. The reason for this is that zero is the identity element for addition. Similarly, the product of the elements of the empty set should be considered to be one (see empty product), since one is the identity element for multiplication.[citation needed]

A derangement is a permutation of a set without fixed points. The empty set can be considered a derangement of itself, because it has only one permutation ( ), and it is vacuously true that no element (of the empty set) can be found that retains its original position.

In other areas of mathematics Edit

Extended real numbers Edit

Since the empty set has no member when it is considered as a subset of any ordered set, every member of that set will be an upper bound and lower bound for the empty set. For example, when considered as a subset of the real numbers, with its usual ordering, represented by the real number line, every real number is both an upper and lower bound for the empty set.[6] When considered as a subset of the extended reals formed by adding two "numbers" or "points" to the real numbers (namely negative infinity, denoted   which is defined to be less than every other extended real number, and positive infinity, denoted   which is defined to be greater than every other extended real number), we have that:

 
and
 

That is, the least upper bound (sup or supremum) of the empty set is negative infinity, while the greatest lower bound (inf or infimum) is positive infinity. By analogy with the above, in the domain of the extended reals, negative infinity is the identity element for the maximum and supremum operators, while positive infinity is the identity element for the minimum and infimum operators.

Topology Edit

In any topological space X, the empty set is open by definition, as is X. Since the complement of an open set is closed and the empty set and X are complements of each other, the empty set is also closed, making it a clopen set. Moreover, the empty set is compact by the fact that every finite set is compact.

The closure of the empty set is empty. This is known as "preservation of nullary unions."

Category theory Edit

If   is a set, then there exists precisely one function   from   to   the empty function. As a result, the empty set is the unique initial object of the category of sets and functions.

The empty set can be turned into a topological space, called the empty space, in just one way: by defining the empty set to be open. This empty topological space is the unique initial object in the category of topological spaces with continuous maps. In fact, it is a strict initial object: only the empty set has a function to the empty set.

Set theory Edit

In the von Neumann construction of the ordinals, 0 is defined as the empty set, and the successor of an ordinal is defined as  . Thus, we have  ,  ,  , and so on. The von Neumann construction, along with the axiom of infinity, which guarantees the existence of at least one infinite set, can be used to construct the set of natural numbers,  , such that the Peano axioms of arithmetic are satisfied.

Questioned existence Edit

Historical issues Edit

In the context of sets of real numbers, Cantor used   to denote "  contains no single point". This   notation was utilized in definitions, for example Cantor defined two sets as being disjoint if their intersection has an absence of points, however it is debatable whether Cantor viewed   as an existent set on its own, or if Cantor merely used   as an emptiness predicate. Zermelo accepted   itself as a set, but considered it an "improper set".[7]

Axiomatic set theory Edit

In Zermelo set theory, the existence of the empty set is assured by the axiom of empty set, and its uniqueness follows from the axiom of extensionality. However, the axiom of empty set can be shown redundant in at least two ways:

  • Standard first-order logic implies, merely from the logical axioms, that something exists, and in the language of set theory, that thing must be a set. Now the existence of the empty set follows easily from the axiom of separation.
  • Even using free logic (which does not logically imply that something exists), there is already an axiom implying the existence of at least one set, namely the axiom of infinity.

Philosophical issues Edit

While the empty set is a standard and widely accepted mathematical concept, it remains an ontological curiosity, whose meaning and usefulness are debated by philosophers and logicians.

The empty set is not the same thing as nothing; rather, it is a set with nothing inside it and a set is always something. This issue can be overcome by viewing a set as a bag—an empty bag undoubtedly still exists. Darling (2004) explains that the empty set is not nothing, but rather "the set of all triangles with four sides, the set of all numbers that are bigger than nine but smaller than eight, and the set of all opening moves in chess that involve a king."[8]

The popular syllogism

Nothing is better than eternal happiness; a ham sandwich is better than nothing; therefore, a ham sandwich is better than eternal happiness

is often used to demonstrate the philosophical relation between the concept of nothing and the empty set. Darling writes that the contrast can be seen by rewriting the statements "Nothing is better than eternal happiness" and "[A] ham sandwich is better than nothing" in a mathematical tone. According to Darling, the former is equivalent to "The set of all things that are better than eternal happiness is  " and the latter to "The set {ham sandwich} is better than the set  ". The first compares elements of sets, while the second compares the sets themselves.[8]

Jonathan Lowe argues that while the empty set

was undoubtedly an important landmark in the history of mathematics, … we should not assume that its utility in calculation is dependent upon its actually denoting some object.

it is also the case that:

"All that we are ever informed about the empty set is that it (1) is a set, (2) has no members, and (3) is unique amongst sets in having no members. However, there are very many things that 'have no members', in the set-theoretical sense—namely, all non-sets. It is perfectly clear why these things have no members, for they are not sets. What is unclear is how there can be, uniquely amongst sets, a set which has no members. We cannot conjure such an entity into existence by mere stipulation."[9]

George Boolos argued that much of what has been heretofore obtained by set theory can just as easily be obtained by plural quantification over individuals, without reifying sets as singular entities having other entities as members.[10]

See also Edit

  • 0 – Number
  • Inhabited set – Property of sets used in constructive mathematics
  • Nothing – Complete absence of anything; the opposite of everything
  • Power set – Mathematical set containing all subsets of a given set

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Weisstein, Eric W. "Empty Set". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-11.
  2. ^ "Earliest Uses of Symbols of Set Theory and Logic".
  3. ^ Rudin, Walter (1976). Principles of Mathematical Analysis (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 300. ISBN 007054235X.
  4. ^ "Unicode Standard 5.2" (PDF).
  5. ^ e.g. Nina Grønnum (2005, 2013) Fonetik og Fonologi: Almen og dansk. Akademisk forlag, Copenhagen.
  6. ^ Bruckner, A.N., Bruckner, J.B., and Thomson, B.S. (2008). Elementary Real Analysis, 2nd edition, p. 9.
  7. ^ A. Kanamori, "The Empty Set, the Singleton, and the Ordered Pair", p.275. Bulletin of Symbolic Logic vol. 9, no. 3, (2003). Accessed 21 August 2023.
  8. ^ a b D. J. Darling (2004). The Universal Book of Mathematics. John Wiley and Sons. p. 106. ISBN 0-471-27047-4.
  9. ^ E. J. Lowe (2005). Locke. Routledge. p. 87.
  10. ^ George Boolos (1984), "To be is to be the value of a variable", The Journal of Philosophy 91: 430–49. Reprinted in 1998, Logic, Logic and Logic (Richard Jeffrey, and Burgess, J., eds.) Harvard University Press, 54–72.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

empty, redirects, here, similar, symbols, disambiguation, other, uses, empty, empty, disambiguation, mathematics, empty, unique, having, elements, size, cardinality, count, elements, zero, some, axiomatic, theories, ensure, that, empty, exists, including, axio. redirects here For similar symbols see O disambiguation For other uses of Empty see Empty disambiguation In mathematics the empty set is the unique set having no elements its size or cardinality count of elements in a set is zero 1 Some axiomatic set theories ensure that the empty set exists by including an axiom of empty set while in other theories its existence can be deduced Many possible properties of sets are vacuously true for the empty set The empty set is the set containing no elements Any set other than the empty set is called non empty In some textbooks and popularizations the empty set is referred to as the null set 1 However null set is a distinct notion within the context of measure theory in which it describes a set of measure zero which is not necessarily empty The empty set may also be called the void set Contents 1 Notation 2 Properties 2 1 Operations on the empty set 3 In other areas of mathematics 3 1 Extended real numbers 3 2 Topology 3 3 Category theory 3 4 Set theory 4 Questioned existence 4 1 Historical issues 4 2 Axiomatic set theory 4 3 Philosophical issues 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksNotation EditMain article Null sign A symbol for the empty setCommon notations for the empty set include displaystyle emptyset and The latter two symbols were introduced by the Bourbaki group specifically Andre Weil in 1939 inspired by the letter O in the Danish and Norwegian alphabets 2 In the past 0 was occasionally used as a symbol for the empty set but this is now considered to be an improper use of notation 3 The symbol is available at Unicode point U 2205 4 It can be coded in HTML as amp empty and as amp 8709 It can be coded in LaTeX as varnothing The symbol displaystyle emptyset is coded in LaTeX as emptyset When writing in languages such as Danish and Norwegian where the empty set character may be confused with the alphabetic letter O as when using the symbol in linguistics the Unicode character U 29B0 REVERSED EMPTY SET may be used instead 5 Properties EditIn standard axiomatic set theory by the principle of extensionality two sets are equal if they have the same elements that is neither of them has an element not in the other As a result there can be only one set with no elements hence the usage of the empty set rather than an empty set The empty set has the following properties Its only subset is the empty set itself A A A displaystyle forall A A subseteq varnothing Rightarrow A varnothing The power set of the empty set is the set containing only the empty set 2 displaystyle 2 varnothing varnothing The number of elements of the empty set i e its cardinality is zero 0 displaystyle mathrm varnothing mathrm 0 For any set A The empty set is a subset of A A A displaystyle forall A varnothing subseteq A The union of A with the empty set is A A A A displaystyle forall A A cup varnothing A The intersection of A with the empty set is the empty set A A displaystyle forall A A cap varnothing varnothing The Cartesian product of A and the empty set is the empty set A A displaystyle forall A A times varnothing varnothing For any property P For every element of displaystyle varnothing the property P holds vacuous truth There is no element of displaystyle varnothing for which the property P holds Conversely if for some property P and some set V the following two statements hold For every element of V the property P holds There is no element of V for which the property P holdsthen V displaystyle V varnothing By the definition of subset the empty set is a subset of any set A That is every element x of displaystyle varnothing belongs to A Indeed if it were not true that every element of displaystyle varnothing is in A then there would be at least one element of displaystyle varnothing that is not present in A Since there are no elements of displaystyle varnothing at all there is no element of displaystyle varnothing that is not in A Any statement that begins for every element of displaystyle varnothing is not making any substantive claim it is a vacuous truth This is often paraphrased as everything is true of the elements of the empty set In the usual set theoretic definition of natural numbers zero is modelled by the empty set Operations on the empty set Edit When speaking of the sum of the elements of a finite set one is inevitably led to the convention that the sum of the elements of the empty set is zero The reason for this is that zero is the identity element for addition Similarly the product of the elements of the empty set should be considered to be one see empty product since one is the identity element for multiplication citation needed A derangement is a permutation of a set without fixed points The empty set can be considered a derangement of itself because it has only one permutation 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 and it is vacuously true that no element of the empty set can be found that retains its original position In other areas of mathematics EditExtended real numbers Edit Since the empty set has no member when it is considered as a subset of any ordered set every member of that set will be an upper bound and lower bound for the empty set For example when considered as a subset of the real numbers with its usual ordering represented by the real number line every real number is both an upper and lower bound for the empty set 6 When considered as a subset of the extended reals formed by adding two numbers or points to the real numbers namely negative infinity denoted displaystyle infty which is defined to be less than every other extended real number and positive infinity denoted displaystyle infty which is defined to be greater than every other extended real number we have that sup min R displaystyle sup varnothing min infty infty cup mathbb R infty and inf max R displaystyle inf varnothing max infty infty cup mathbb R infty That is the least upper bound sup or supremum of the empty set is negative infinity while the greatest lower bound inf or infimum is positive infinity By analogy with the above in the domain of the extended reals negative infinity is the identity element for the maximum and supremum operators while positive infinity is the identity element for the minimum and infimum operators Topology Edit In any topological space X the empty set is open by definition as is X Since the complement of an open set is closed and the empty set and X are complements of each other the empty set is also closed making it a clopen set Moreover the empty set is compact by the fact that every finite set is compact The closure of the empty set is empty This is known as preservation of nullary unions Category theory Edit If A displaystyle A is a set then there exists precisely one function f displaystyle f from displaystyle varnothing to A displaystyle A the empty function As a result the empty set is the unique initial object of the category of sets and functions The empty set can be turned into a topological space called the empty space in just one way by defining the empty set to be open This empty topological space is the unique initial object in the category of topological spaces with continuous maps In fact it is a strict initial object only the empty set has a function to the empty set Set theory Edit In the von Neumann construction of the ordinals 0 is defined as the empty set and the successor of an ordinal is defined as S a a a displaystyle S alpha alpha cup alpha Thus we have 0 displaystyle 0 varnothing 1 0 0 displaystyle 1 0 cup 0 varnothing 2 1 1 displaystyle 2 1 cup 1 varnothing varnothing and so on The von Neumann construction along with the axiom of infinity which guarantees the existence of at least one infinite set can be used to construct the set of natural numbers N 0 displaystyle mathbb N 0 such that the Peano axioms of arithmetic are satisfied Questioned existence EditHistorical issues Edit In the context of sets of real numbers Cantor used P O displaystyle P equiv O to denote P displaystyle P contains no single point This O displaystyle equiv O notation was utilized in definitions for example Cantor defined two sets as being disjoint if their intersection has an absence of points however it is debatable whether Cantor viewed O displaystyle O as an existent set on its own or if Cantor merely used O displaystyle equiv O as an emptiness predicate Zermelo accepted O displaystyle O itself as a set but considered it an improper set 7 Axiomatic set theory Edit In Zermelo set theory the existence of the empty set is assured by the axiom of empty set and its uniqueness follows from the axiom of extensionality However the axiom of empty set can be shown redundant in at least two ways Standard first order logic implies merely from the logical axioms that something exists and in the language of set theory that thing must be a set Now the existence of the empty set follows easily from the axiom of separation Even using free logic which does not logically imply that something exists there is already an axiom implying the existence of at least one set namely the axiom of infinity Philosophical issues Edit While the empty set is a standard and widely accepted mathematical concept it remains an ontological curiosity whose meaning and usefulness are debated by philosophers and logicians The empty set is not the same thing as nothing rather it is a set with nothing inside it and a set is always something This issue can be overcome by viewing a set as a bag an empty bag undoubtedly still exists Darling 2004 explains that the empty set is not nothing but rather the set of all triangles with four sides the set of all numbers that are bigger than nine but smaller than eight and the set of all opening moves in chess that involve a king 8 The popular syllogism Nothing is better than eternal happiness a ham sandwich is better than nothing therefore a ham sandwich is better than eternal happinessis often used to demonstrate the philosophical relation between the concept of nothing and the empty set Darling writes that the contrast can be seen by rewriting the statements Nothing is better than eternal happiness and A ham sandwich is better than nothing in a mathematical tone According to Darling the former is equivalent to The set of all things that are better than eternal happiness is displaystyle varnothing and the latter to The set ham sandwich is better than the set displaystyle varnothing The first compares elements of sets while the second compares the sets themselves 8 Jonathan Lowe argues that while the empty set was undoubtedly an important landmark in the history of mathematics we should not assume that its utility in calculation is dependent upon its actually denoting some object it is also the case that All that we are ever informed about the empty set is that it 1 is a set 2 has no members and 3 is unique amongst sets in having no members However there are very many things that have no members in the set theoretical sense namely all non sets It is perfectly clear why these things have no members for they are not sets What is unclear is how there can be uniquely amongst sets a set which has no members We cannot conjure such an entity into existence by mere stipulation 9 George Boolos argued that much of what has been heretofore obtained by set theory can just as easily be obtained by plural quantification over individuals without reifying sets as singular entities having other entities as members 10 See also Edit0 NumberPages displaying short descriptions with no spaces Inhabited set Property of sets used in constructive mathematics Nothing Complete absence of anything the opposite of everything Power set Mathematical set containing all subsets of a given setReferences Edit a b Weisstein Eric W Empty Set mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 08 11 Earliest Uses of Symbols of Set Theory and Logic Rudin Walter 1976 Principles of Mathematical Analysis 3rd ed McGraw Hill p 300 ISBN 007054235X Unicode Standard 5 2 PDF e g Nina Gronnum 2005 2013 Fonetik og Fonologi Almen og dansk Akademisk forlag Copenhagen Bruckner A N Bruckner J B and Thomson B S 2008 Elementary Real Analysis 2nd edition p 9 A Kanamori The Empty Set the Singleton and the Ordered Pair p 275 Bulletin of Symbolic Logic vol 9 no 3 2003 Accessed 21 August 2023 a b D J Darling 2004 The Universal Book of Mathematics John Wiley and Sons p 106 ISBN 0 471 27047 4 E J Lowe 2005 Locke Routledge p 87 George Boolos 1984 To be is to be the value of a variable The Journal of Philosophy 91 430 49 Reprinted in 1998 Logic Logic and Logic Richard Jeffrey and Burgess J eds Harvard University Press 54 72 Further reading EditHalmos Paul Naive Set Theory Princeton NJ D Van Nostrand Company 1960 Reprinted by Springer Verlag New York 1974 ISBN 0 387 90092 6 Springer Verlag edition Reprinted by Martino Fine Books 2011 ISBN 978 1 61427 131 4 paperback edition Jech Thomas 2002 Set Theory Springer Monographs in Mathematics 3rd millennium ed Springer ISBN 3 540 44085 2 Graham Malcolm 1975 Modern Elementary Mathematics 2nd ed Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 0155610392External links EditWeisstein Eric W Empty Set MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Empty set amp oldid 1171576710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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