You can count things like the people in a room, apples in a basket and letters in this sentence. These are examples of finite sets - their cardinality is just the number of objects they contain.
If a dinner party has 13 guests, and there are 13 place settings at the table, we can say the cardinality of the guests is the same as the cardinality of the dinner plates or of the soup spoons. When the guests are seated, each guest has a plate and a soup spoon. If one of the guests does not show up, the cardinalities would then differ.
You can also count the positive integers. In fact you use the positive integers to do the counting, so they're sometimes called the counting numbers. There are an infinite number of them. So their cardinality can't be a number like 43 or 125. So we give this cardinality a symbol instead: Alepho Any collection [set] whose elements can be placed in a one-to-one correspondence to the counting numbers has the cardinality Alepho We call such collections countably infinite. That might sound like a contradiction.
Other collections are infinite in "number" [cardinality] but are not countable. An example is the real numbers. Their cardinality is given the symbol Aleph1. They cannot be placed in a 1-1 correspondence to the counting numbers. Other sets have even higher cardinality.
So we've mentioned four classes of sets:
.
finite sets,
the positive integers [countable] Alepho
the real numbers [uncountable] Aleph1
higher infinities Aleph2... .
Just for fun, classify the following ten sets by cardinality: 1, 2, 3 or 4.
.
Unicorns
Negative integers
Odd integers
Neurons in your brain
Rational numbers [p/q where p and q are integers]
Atoms in the universe
Functions of real numbers
Points in the line segment [0, 1]
Points in the square having diagonally opposite corners [0,0] and [1,1]
Points in infinite 3-space. .
Remember, if you can construct a 1-1 correspondence, you can say two sets have the same cardinality. And here's a clue - the list has at least one of each type.
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bonanova
You can count things like the people in a room, apples in a basket and letters in this sentence. These are examples of finite sets - their cardinality is just the number of objects they contain.
If a dinner party has 13 guests, and there are 13 place settings at the table, we can say the cardinality of the guests is the same as the cardinality of the dinner plates or of the soup spoons. When the guests are seated, each guest has a plate and a soup spoon. If one of the guests does not show up, the cardinalities would then differ.
You can also count the positive integers. In fact you use the positive integers to do the counting, so they're sometimes called the counting numbers. There are an infinite number of them. So their cardinality can't be a number like 43 or 125. So we give this cardinality a symbol instead: Alepho Any collection [set] whose elements can be placed in a one-to-one correspondence to the counting numbers has the cardinality Alepho We call such collections countably infinite. That might sound like a contradiction.
Other collections are infinite in "number" [cardinality] but are not countable. An example is the real numbers. Their cardinality is given the symbol Aleph1. They cannot be placed in a 1-1 correspondence to the counting numbers. Other sets have even higher cardinality.
So we've mentioned four classes of sets:
.
- finite sets,
- the positive integers [countable] Alepho
- the real numbers [uncountable] Aleph1
- higher infinities Aleph2...
Just for fun, classify the following ten sets by cardinality: 1, 2, 3 or 4..
.
.
Remember, if you can construct a 1-1 correspondence, you can say two sets have the same cardinality. And here's a clue - the list has at least one of each type.
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