Difference between revisions of "Russell's Paradox"
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| − | + | The '''Russell's Paradox''', credited to Bertrand Russell, was one of those which forced the axiomatization of set theory. | |
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| + | Paradox | ||
| + | We start with the property P: (x does not belong to x). We define C to be the collection of all x with the property P. Now comes the question: does C have the property P? Assuming it does, it cannot be in itself, in spite of satisfying its own membership criterion, a contradiction. Assuming it doesn't, it must be in itself, in spite of not satisfying its own membership criterion. This is the paradox. | ||
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| + | See Also | ||
| + | *[[Set]] | ||
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| + | [[Category:Set theory]] | ||
Latest revision as of 16:57, 12 May 2023
The Russell's Paradox, credited to Bertrand Russell, was one of those which forced the axiomatization of set theory.
Paradox We start with the property P: (x does not belong to x). We define C to be the collection of all x with the property P. Now comes the question: does C have the property P? Assuming it does, it cannot be in itself, in spite of satisfying its own membership criterion, a contradiction. Assuming it doesn't, it must be in itself, in spite of not satisfying its own membership criterion. This is the paradox.
See Also