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This book presents a set theoretical development for the
foundations of the theory of atomic and finitely supported
structures. It analyzes whether a classical result can be
adequately reformulated by replacing a 'non-atomic structure' with
an 'atomic, finitely supported structure'. It also presents many
specific properties, such as finiteness, cardinality, connectivity,
fixed point, order and uniformity, of finitely supported atomic
structures that do not have non-atomic correspondents. In the
framework of finitely supported sets, the authors analyze the
consistency of various forms of choice and related results. They
introduce and study the notion of 'cardinality' by presenting
various order and arithmetic properties. Finitely supported
partially ordered sets, chain complete sets, lattices and Galois
connections are studied, and new fixed point, calculability and
approximation properties are presented. In this framework, the
authors study the finitely supported L-fuzzy subsets of a finitely
supported set and the finitely supported fuzzy subgroups of a
finitely supported group. Several pairwise non-equivalent
definitions for the notion of 'infinity' (Dedekind infinity,
Mostowski infinity, Kuratowski infinity, Tarski infinity, ascending
infinity) are introduced, compared and studied in the new
framework. Relevant examples of sets that satisfy some forms of
infinity while not satisfying others are provided. Uniformly
supported sets are analyzed, and certain surprising properties are
presented. Finally, some variations of the finite support
requirement are discussed. The book will be of value to researchers
in the foundations of set theory, algebra and logic.
In this book the authors present an alternative set theory dealing
with a more relaxed notion of infiniteness, called finitely
supported mathematics (FSM). It has strong connections to the
Fraenkel-Mostowski (FM) permutative model of Zermelo-Fraenkel (ZF)
set theory with atoms and to the theory of (generalized) nominal
sets. More exactly, FSM is ZF mathematics rephrased in terms of
finitely supported structures, where the set of atoms is infinite
(not necessarily countable as for nominal sets). In FSM, 'sets' are
replaced either by `invariant sets' (sets endowed with some group
actions satisfying a finite support requirement) or by `finitely
supported sets' (finitely supported elements in the powerset of an
invariant set). It is a theory of `invariant algebraic structures'
in which infinite algebraic structures are characterized by using
their finite supports. After explaining the motivation for using
invariant sets in the experimental sciences as well as the
connections with the nominal approach, admissible sets and Gandy
machines (Chapter 1), the authors present in Chapter 2 the basics
of invariant sets and show that the principles of constructing FSM
have historical roots both in the definition of Tarski `logical
notions' and in the Erlangen Program of Klein for the
classification of various geometries according to invariants under
suitable groups of transformations. Furthermore, the consistency of
various choice principles is analyzed in FSM. Chapter 3 examines
whether it is possible to obtain valid results by replacing the
notion of infinite sets with the notion of invariant sets in the
classical ZF results. The authors present techniques for
reformulating ZF properties of algebraic structures in FSM. In
Chapter 4 they generalize FM set theory by providing a new set of
axioms inspired by the theory of amorphous sets, and so defining
the extended Fraenkel-Mostowski (EFM) set theory. In Chapter 5 they
define FSM semantics for certain process calculi (e.g., fusion
calculus), and emphasize the links to the nominal techniques used
in computer science. They demonstrate a complete equivalence
between the new FSM semantics (defined by using binding operators
instead of side conditions for presenting the transition rules) and
the known semantics of these process calculi. The book is useful
for researchers and graduate students in computer science and
mathematics, particularly those engaged with logic and set theory.
This book presents a set theoretical development for the
foundations of the theory of atomic and finitely supported
structures. It analyzes whether a classical result can be
adequately reformulated by replacing a 'non-atomic structure' with
an 'atomic, finitely supported structure'. It also presents many
specific properties, such as finiteness, cardinality, connectivity,
fixed point, order and uniformity, of finitely supported atomic
structures that do not have non-atomic correspondents. In the
framework of finitely supported sets, the authors analyze the
consistency of various forms of choice and related results. They
introduce and study the notion of 'cardinality' by presenting
various order and arithmetic properties. Finitely supported
partially ordered sets, chain complete sets, lattices and Galois
connections are studied, and new fixed point, calculability and
approximation properties are presented. In this framework, the
authors study the finitely supported L-fuzzy subsets of a finitely
supported set and the finitely supported fuzzy subgroups of a
finitely supported group. Several pairwise non-equivalent
definitions for the notion of 'infinity' (Dedekind infinity,
Mostowski infinity, Kuratowski infinity, Tarski infinity, ascending
infinity) are introduced, compared and studied in the new
framework. Relevant examples of sets that satisfy some forms of
infinity while not satisfying others are provided. Uniformly
supported sets are analyzed, and certain surprising properties are
presented. Finally, some variations of the finite support
requirement are discussed. The book will be of value to researchers
in the foundations of set theory, algebra and logic.
In this book the authors present an alternative set theory dealing
with a more relaxed notion of infiniteness, called finitely
supported mathematics (FSM). It has strong connections to the
Fraenkel-Mostowski (FM) permutative model of Zermelo-Fraenkel (ZF)
set theory with atoms and to the theory of (generalized) nominal
sets. More exactly, FSM is ZF mathematics rephrased in terms of
finitely supported structures, where the set of atoms is infinite
(not necessarily countable as for nominal sets). In FSM, 'sets' are
replaced either by `invariant sets' (sets endowed with some group
actions satisfying a finite support requirement) or by `finitely
supported sets' (finitely supported elements in the powerset of an
invariant set). It is a theory of `invariant algebraic structures'
in which infinite algebraic structures are characterized by using
their finite supports. After explaining the motivation for using
invariant sets in the experimental sciences as well as the
connections with the nominal approach, admissible sets and Gandy
machines (Chapter 1), the authors present in Chapter 2 the basics
of invariant sets and show that the principles of constructing FSM
have historical roots both in the definition of Tarski `logical
notions' and in the Erlangen Program of Klein for the
classification of various geometries according to invariants under
suitable groups of transformations. Furthermore, the consistency of
various choice principles is analyzed in FSM. Chapter 3 examines
whether it is possible to obtain valid results by replacing the
notion of infinite sets with the notion of invariant sets in the
classical ZF results. The authors present techniques for
reformulating ZF properties of algebraic structures in FSM. In
Chapter 4 they generalize FM set theory by providing a new set of
axioms inspired by the theory of amorphous sets, and so defining
the extended Fraenkel-Mostowski (EFM) set theory. In Chapter 5 they
define FSM semantics for certain process calculi (e.g., fusion
calculus), and emphasize the links to the nominal techniques used
in computer science. They demonstrate a complete equivalence
between the new FSM semantics (defined by using binding operators
instead of side conditions for presenting the transition rules) and
the known semantics of these process calculi. The book is useful
for researchers and graduate students in computer science and
mathematics, particularly those engaged with logic and set theory.
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