In constructive mathematics, a collection is subcountable if there exists a partial surjection from the natural numbers onto it. This may be expressed as

where denotes that is a surjective function from a onto . The surjection is a member of and here the subclass of is required to be a set. In other words, all elements of a subcountable collection are functionally in the image of an indexing set of counting numbers and thus the set can be understood as being dominated by the countable set .

Discussion edit

Nomenclature edit

Note that nomenclature of countability and finiteness properties vary substantially - in part because many of them coincide when assuming excluded middle. To reiterate, the discussion here concerns the property defined in terms of surjections onto the set   being characterized. The language here is common in constructive set theory texts, but the name subcountable has otherwise also been given to properties in terms of injections out of the set being characterized.

The set   in the definition can also be abstracted away, and in terms of the more general notion   may be called a subquotient of  .

Example edit

Important cases are where the set in question is some subclass of a bigger class of functions as studied in computability theory.

There cannot be a computable surjection   from   onto the set of total computable functions  , as demonstrated via the function   from the diagonal construction, which could never be in such a surjections image. However, via the codes of all possible partial computable functions, which also allows non-terminating programs, such subsets of functions, such as the total functions, are seen to be subcountable sets: The total functions are the range of some strict subset   of the natural numbers. Being dominated by an uncomputable, and so constructively uncountable, set of numbers, the name subcountable thus conveys that the constructively uncountable set   is no bigger than  . Note that no effective map between all counting numbers   and the unbounded and non-finite indexing set   is asserted here, merely the subset relation  . Being total is famously not a decidable property. By Rice's theorem on index sets, most domains of indices are, in fact, not computable sets.

The demonstration that   is subcountable also implies that it is classically (non-constructively) formally countable, but this does not reflect any effective countability. In other words, the fact that an algorithm listing all total functions in sequence cannot be coded up is not captured by classical axioms regarding set and function existence. We see that, depending on the axioms of a theory, subcountability may be more likely to be provable than countability.

Relation to excluded middle edit

In constructive logics and set theories tie the existence of a function between infinite (non-finite) sets to questions of decidability and possibly of effectivity. There, the subcountability property splits from countability and is thus not a redundant notion. The indexing set   of natural numbers may be posited to exist, e.g. as a subset via set theoretical axioms like the separation axiom schema. Then by definition of  ,

 
But this set may then still fail to be detachable, in the sense that
 
may not be provable without assuming it as an axiom. One may fail to effectively count the subcountable set   if one fails to map the counting numbers   into the indexing set  , for this reason. Being countable implies being subcountable. In the appropriate context with Markov's principle, the converse is equivalent to the law of excluded middle, i.e. that for all proposition   holds  . In particular, constructively this converse direction does not generally hold.

In classical mathematics edit

Asserting all laws of classical logic, the disjunctive property of   discussed above indeed does hold for all sets. Then, for nonempty  , the properties numerable (which here shall mean that   injects into  ), countable (  has   as its range), subcountable (a subset of   surjects into  ) and also not  -productive (a countability property essentially defined in terms of subsets of  ) are all equivalent and express that a set is finite or countably infinite.

Non-classical assertions edit

Without the law of excluded middle, it can be consistent to assert the subcountability of sets that classically (i.e. non-constructively) exceed the cardinality of the natural numbers. Note that in a constructive setting, a countability claim about the function space   out of the full set  , as in  , may be disproven. But subcountability   of an uncountable set   by a set   that is not effectively detachable from   may be permitted.

A constructive proof is also classically valid. If a set is proven uncountable constructively, then in a classical context is it provably not subcountable. As this applies to  , the classical framework with its large function space is incompatible with the constructive Church's thesis, an axiom of Russian constructivism.

Subcountable and ω-productive are mutually exclusive edit

A set   shall be called  -productive if, whenever any of its subsets   is the range of some partial function on  , there always exists an element   that remains in the complement of that range.[1]

If there exists any surjection onto some  , then its corresponding compliment as described would equal the empty set  , and so a subcountable set is never  -productive. As defined above, the property of being  -productive associates the range   of any partial function to a particular value   not in the functions range,  . In this way, a set   being  -productive speaks for how hard it is to generate all the elements of it: They cannot be generated from the naturals using a single function. The  -productivity property constitutes an obstruction to subcountability. As this also implies uncountability, diagonal arguments often involve this notion, explicitly since the late seventies.

One may establish the impossibility of computable enumerability of   by considering only the computably enumerable subsets   and one may require the set of all obstructing  's to be the image of a total recursive so called production function.

In set theory, where partial functions are modeled as collection of pairs, the space   given as   exactly holds all partial functions on   that have, as their range, only subsets   of  . For an  -productive set   one finds

 

Read constructively, this associates any partial function   with an element   not in that functions range. This property emphasizes the incompatibility of an  -productive set   with any surjective (possibly partial) function. Below this is applied in the study of subcountability assumptions.

Set theories edit

Cantorian arguments on subsets of the naturals edit

As reference theory we look at the constructive set theory CZF, which has Replacement, Bounded Separation, strong Infinity, is agnostic towards the existence of power sets, but includes the axiom that asserts that any function space   is set, given   are also sets. In this theory, it is moreover consistent to assert that every set is subcountable. The compatibility of various further axioms is discussed in this section by means of possible surjections on an infinite set of counting numbers  . Here   shall denote a model of the standard natural numbers.

Recall that for functions  , by definition of total functionality, there exists a unique return value for all values   in the domain,

 

and for a subcountable set, the surjection is still total on a subset of  . Constructively, fewer such existential claims will be provable than classically.

The situations discussed below—onto power classes versus onto function spaces—are different from one another: Opposed to general subclass defining predicates and their truth values (not necessarily provably just true and false), a function (which in programming terms is terminating) does makes accessible information about data for all its subdomains (subsets of the  ). When as characteristic functions for their subsets, functions, through their return values, decide subset membership. As membership in a generally defined set is not necessarily decidable, the (total) functions   are not automatically in bijection with all the subsets of  . So constructively, subsets are a more elaborate concept than characteristic functions. In fact, in the context of some non-classical axioms on top of CZF, even the power class of a singleton, e.g. the class   of all subsets of  , is shown to be a proper class.

Onto power classes edit

Below, the fact is used that the special case   of the negation introduction law implies that   is contradictory.

For simplicitly of the argument, assume   is a set. Then consider a subset   and a function  . Further, as in Cantor's theorem about power sets, define[2]

 
where,
 
This is a subclass of   defined in dependency of   and it can also be written
 
It exists as subset via Separation. Now assuming there exists a number   with   implies the contradiction
 
So as a set, one finds   is  -productive in that we can define an obstructing   for any given surjection. Also note that the existence of a surjection   would automatically make   into a set, via Replacement in CZF, and so this function existence is unconditionally impossible.

We conclude that the subcountability axiom, asserting all sets are subcountable, is incompatible with   being a set, as implied e.g. by the power set axiom.

Following the above prove makes it clear that we cannot map   onto just   either. Bounded separation indeed implies that no set   whatsoever maps onto  .

Relatedly, for any function  , a similar analysis using the subset of its range   shows that   cannot be an injection. The situation is more complicated for function spaces.[3]

In classical ZFC without Powerset or any of its equivalents, it is also consistent that all subclasses of the reals which are sets are subcountable. In that context, this translates to the statement that all sets of real numbers are countable.[4] Of course, that theory does not have the function space set  .

Onto function spaces edit

By definition of function spaces, the set   holds those subsets of the set   which are provably total and functional. Asserting the permitted subcountability of all sets turns, in particular,   into a subcountable set.

So here we consider a surjective function   and the subset of   separated as[5]

 
with the diagonalizing predicate defined as
 
which we can also phrase without the negations as
 
This set is classically provably a function in  , designed to take the value   for particular inputs  . And it can classically be used to prove that the existence of   as a surjection is actually contradictory. However, constructively, unless the proposition   in its definition is decidable so that the set actually defined a functional assignment, we cannot prove this set to be a member of the function space. And so we just cannot draw the classical conclusion.

In this fashion, subcountability of   is permitted, and indeed models of the theory exist. Nevertheless, also in the case of CZF, the existence of a full surjection  , with domain  , is indeed contradictory. The decidable membership of   makes the set also not countable, i.e. uncountable.

Beyond these observations, also note that for any non-zero number  , the functions   in   involving the surjection   cannot be extended to all of   by a similar contradiction argument. This can be expressed as saying that there are then partial functions that cannot be extended to full functions in  . Note that when given a  , one cannot necessarily decide whether  , and so one cannot even decide whether the value of a potential function extension on   is already determined for the previously characterized surjection  .

The subcountibility axiom, asserting all sets are subcountable, is incompatible with any new axiom making   countable, including LEM.

Models edit

The above analysis affects formal properties of codings of  . Models for the non-classical extension of CZF theory by subcountability postulates have been constructed.[6] Such non-constructive axioms can be seen as choice principles which, however, do not tend to increase the proof-theoretical strengths of the theories much.

The notion of size edit

Subcountability as judgement of small size shall not be conflated with the standard mathematical definition of cardinality relations as defined by Cantor, with smaller cardinality being defined in terms of injections and equality of cardinalities being defined in terms of bijections. Constructively, the preorder " " on the class of sets fails to be decidable and anti-symmetric. The function space   (and also  ) in a moderately rich set theory is always found to be neither finite nor in bijection with  , by Cantor's diagonal argument. This is what it means to be uncountable. But the argument that the cardinality of that set would thus in some sense exceed that of the natural numbers relies on a restriction to just the classical size conception and its induced ordering of sets by cardinality.

As seen in the example of the function space considered in computability theory, not every infinite subset of   necessarily is in constructive bijection with  , thus making room for a more refined distinction between uncountable sets in constructive contexts. Motivated by the above sections, the infinite set   may be considered "smaller" than the class  .

Related properties edit

A subcountable set has alternatively also been called subcountably indexed. The analogous notion exists in which " " in the definition is replaced by the existence of a set that is a subset of some finite set. This property is variously called subfinitely indexed.

In category theory all these notions are subquotients.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gert Smolka, Skolems paradox and constructivism, Lecture Notes, Saarland University, Jan. 2015
  2. ^ Méhkeri, Daniel (2010), A simple computational interpretation of set theory, arXiv:1005.4380
  3. ^ Bauer, A. "An injection from N^N to N", 2011
  4. ^ Gitman, Victoria (2011), What is the theory ZFC without power set, arXiv:1110.2430
  5. ^ Bell, John L. (2004), "Russell's paradox and diagonalization in a constructive context" (PDF), in Link, Godehard (ed.), One hundred years of Russell's paradox, De Gruyter Series in Logic and its Applications, vol. 6, de Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 221–225, MR 2104745
  6. ^ Rathjen, Michael (2006), "Choice principles in constructive and classical set theories" (PDF), in Chatzidakis, Zoé; Koepke, Peter; Pohlers, Wolfram (eds.), Logic Colloquium '02: Joint proceedings of the Annual European Summer Meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic and the Biannual Meeting of the German Association for Mathematical Logic and the Foundations of Exact Sciences (the Colloquium Logicum) held in Münster, August 3–11, 2002, Lecture Notes in Logic, vol. 27, La Jolla, CA: Association for Symbolic Logic, pp. 299–326, MR 2258712
  7. ^ McCarty, Charles (1986), "Subcountability under realizability", Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 27 (2): 210–220, doi:10.1305/ndjfl/1093636613, MR 0842149