axiom of power set

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axiom of power set

  1. (set theory) The axiom that the power set of any set exists and is a valid set, which appears in the standard axiomatisation of set theory, ZFC.
    • 1978, Thomas Jech, Set Theory, Academic Press, page 38:
      The axiom of choice differs from other axioms of ZF by stating existence of a set (i.e., a choice function) without defining it (unlike, for instance, the axiom of pairing or the axiom of power set).
    • 2003, Thomas Forster, Reasoning About Theoretical Entities, World Scientific, page 51:
      Verifying that the axiom of power set is in relies on some rudimentary comprehension axioms.
    • 2011, Adam Rieger, “9: Paradox, ZF, and the Axiom of Foundation”, in David DeVidi, Michael Hallett, Peter Clark, editors, Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy: Vintage Enthusiasms: Essays in Honour of John L. Bell, Springer, page 183:
      But the ZF axioms of which the hierarchy is an intuitive model involve impredicative quantifications. Most striking is the axiom of power set in tandem with the axiom of separation.
    • 2012, A. H. Lightstone, H. B. Enderton (editor), Mathematical Logic: An Introduction to Model Theory, Plenum Press, Softcover, page 292,
      The Axiom of Power Set asserts that the collection of all subsets of a set is a set. [] Adding the Axiom of Power Set compels the collection to be a set.

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