Axiom of extensionality


The axiom of extensionality, also called the axiom of extent, is an axiom used in many forms of axiomatic set theory, such as Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory. The axiom defines what a set is. Informally, the axiom means that the two sets A and B are equal if and only if A and B have the same members.

Etymology

The term extensionality, as used in 'axiom of extensionality' has its roots in logic. An intensional definition describes the necessary and sufficient conditions for a term to apply to an object. For example: "An even number is an integer that is divisible by 2." An extensional definition instead lists all objects where the term applies. For example: "An even number is any one of the following integers: 0, 2, 4, 6, 8..., -2, -4, -6, -8..." In logic, the extension of a predicate is the set of all things for which the predicate is true.
The logical term was introduced to set theory in 1893, Gottlob Frege attempted to use this idea of an extension formally in his Basic Laws of Arithmetic, where, if is a predicate, its extension , is the set of all objects satisfying. For example if is "x is even" then is the set. In his work, he defined his infamous Basic Law V as:Stating that if two predicates have the same extensions then they are logically equivalent, however, it was determined later that this axiom led to Russell's paradox. The first explicit statement of the modern axiom of extensionality was in 1908 by Ernst Zermelo in a paper on the well-ordering theorem, where he presented the first axiomatic set theory, now called Zermelo set theory, which became the basis of modern set theories. The specific term for "Extensionality" used by Zermelo was "Bestimmtheit". The specific English term "extensionality" only became common in mathematical and logical texts in the 1920s and 1930s, particularly with the formalization of logic and set theory by figures like Alfred Tarski and John von Neumann.

In ZF set theory

In the formal language of the Zermelo–Fraenkel axioms, the axiom reads:
or in words:
In, all members of sets are themselves sets, but not in set theory with urelements. The axiom's usefulness can be seen from the fact that, if one accepts that, where is a set and is a formula that occurs free in but doesn't, then the axiom assures that there is a unique set whose members are precisely whatever objects satisfy the formula .
The converse of the axiom,, follows from the substitution property of equality. Despite this, the axiom is sometimes given directly as a biconditional, i.e., as.

In NF set theory

's New Foundations set theory, in Quine's original presentations of it, treats the symbol for equality or identity as a shorthand with a definition in terms of, instead of a primitive symbol of the formal language like in the usual presentation of the ZF set theory. There are two variants of such a definition, one needing a separate axiom of extensionality and the other already representing the principle of extensionality in itself.
In Quine's New Foundations for Mathematical Logic, the original paper of NF, the definition D8 defines as shorthand for. This definition is based more on intension rather than extension, as it can be read as "two objects are equal if one belongs to all sets that the other belongs to ". This definition, as well as a variant that replaces the conditional by the biconditional, was common in Quine's time. The name "principle of extensionality" is then given to the postulate P1,, which is logically equivalent to the ZF axiom of extensionality.
In his Mathematical Logic, Quine defines as ., exactly equivalent to the antecedent of the ZF axiom of extensionality. This is based on the principle that "classes are the same when their members are the same", although Quine seems to have taken this principle for granted at this point and does not explicitly discuss "extensionality". This definition change was motivated by a desire to be compatible with proper classes. Quine also has to introduce a substitutivity axiom
to compensate for this definition change.
Modern accounts of NF usually are based on first-order logic with equality and thus admit the axiom of extensionality in its ZF form.

In ZU set theory

In the Scott–Potter set theory, the "extensionality principle" is given as a theorem rather than an axiom, which is proved from the definition of a "collection".

In set theory with ur-elements

An ur-element is a member of a set that is not itself a set.
In the Zermelo–Fraenkel axioms, there are no ur-elements, but they are included in some alternative axiomatisations of set theory.
Ur-elements can be treated as a different logical type from sets; in this case, makes no sense if is an ur-element, so the axiom of extensionality simply applies only to sets.
Alternatively, in untyped logic, we can require to be false whenever is an ur-element.
In this case, the usual axiom of extensionality would then imply that every ur-element is equal to the empty set.
To avoid this consequence, we can modify the axiom of extensionality to apply only to nonempty sets, so that it reads:
That is:
Yet another alternative in untyped logic is to define itself to be the only element of
whenever is an ur-element. Such a set is known as a Quine atom. While this approach can serve to preserve the axiom of extensionality, the axiom of regularity will need an adjustment instead.