.
Empty set
In mathematics, and more specifically set theory, the empty set is the unique set having no elements; its size or cardinality (count of elements in a set) is zero. Some axiomatic set theories ensure that the empty set exists by including an axiom of empty set; in other theories, its existence can be deduced. Many possible properties of sets are trivially true for the empty set.
Null set was once a common synonym for "empty set", but is now a technical term in measure theory. The empty set may also be called the void set.
Notation
A symbol for the empty set
Common notations for the empty set include "{}", "∅", and "\emptyset". The latter two symbols were introduced by the Bourbaki group (specifically André Weil) in 1939, inspired by the letter Ø in the Norwegian and Danish alphabets (and not related in any way to the Greek letter Φ).[1]
The empty-set symbol ∅ is found at Unicode point U+2205.[2] In TeX, it is coded as \emptyset or \( \varnothing.
Properties
In standard axiomatic set theory, by the principle of extensionality, two sets are equal if they have the same elements; therefore there can be only one set with no elements. Hence there is but one empty set, and we speak of "the empty set" rather than "an empty set".
The mathematical symbols employed below are explained here.
For any set A:
The empty set is a subset of A:
\( \forall A: \emptyset \subseteq A \)
The union of A with the empty set is A:
\( \forall A: A \cup \emptyset = A \)
The intersection of A with the empty set is the empty set:
\( \forall A: A \cap \emptyset = \emptyset \)
The Cartesian product of A and the empty set is the empty set:
\( \forall A: A \times \emptyset = \emptyset \)
The empty set has the following properties:
Its only subset is the empty set itself:
\( \forall A: A \subseteq \emptyset \Rightarrow A = \emptyset \)
The power set of the empty set is the set containing only the empty set:
\( 2^{\emptyset } = \{\emptyset\} \)
Its number of elements (that is, its cardinality) is zero:
\( \mathrm{card}(\emptyset) = 0 \)
The connection between the empty set and zero goes further, however: in the standard set-theoretic definition of natural numbers, we use sets to model the natural numbers. In this context, zero is modelled by the empty set.
For any property:
For every element of \( \emptyset \) the property holds (vacuous truth);
There is no element of \( \emptyset \) for which the property holds.
Conversely, if for some property and some set V, the following two statements hold:
For every element of V the property holds;
There is no element of V for which the property holds,
then \( V = \emptyset. \)
By the definition of subset, the empty set is a subset of any set A, as every element x of \( \emptyset \) belongs to A. If it is not true that every element of \( \emptyset \) is in A, there must be at least one element of \( \emptyset that is not present in A. Since there are no elements of \( \emptyset \) at all, there is no element of \emptyset that is not in A. Hence every element of \( \emptyset \) is in A, and \( \emptyset \) is a subset of A. Any statement that begins "for every element of \( \emptyset" is not making any substantive claim; it is a vacuous truth. This is often paraphrased as "everything is true of the elements of the empty set."
Operations on the empty set
Operations performed on the empty set (as a set of things to be operated upon) are unusual. For example, the sum of the elements of the empty set is zero, but the product of the elements of the empty set is one (see empty product). Ultimately, the results of these operations say more about the operation in question than about the empty set. For instance, zero is the identity element for addition, and one is the identity element for multiplication.
A disarrangement of a set is a permutation of the set that leaves no element in the same position. The empty set is a disarrangment of itself as no element can be found that retains its original position.
In other areas of mathematics
Extended real numbers
Since the empty set has no members, when it is considered as a subset of any ordered set, then every member of that set will be an upper bound and lower bound for the empty set. For example, when considered as a subset of the real numbers, with its usual ordering, represented by the real number line, every real number is both an upper and lower bound for the empty set.[3] When considered as a subset of the extended reals formed by adding two "numbers" or "points" to the real numbers, namely negative infinity, denoted \( -\infty\!\, \) , which is defined to be less than every other extended real number, and positive infinity, denoted \( +\infty\!\,, \) which is defined to be greater than every other extended real number, then:
\( \sup\emptyset=\min(\{-\infty, +\infty \} \cup \mathbb{R})=-\infty, \)
and
\( \inf\emptyset=\max(\{-\infty, +\infty \} \cup \mathbb{R})=+\infty. \)
That is, the least upper bound (sup or supremum) of the empty set is negative infinity, while the greatest lower bound (inf or infimum) is positive infinity. By analogy with the above, in the domain of the extended reals, negative infinity is the identity element for the maximum and supremum operators, while positive infinity is the identity element for minimum and infimum.
Topology
Considered as a subset of the real number line (or more generally any topological space), the empty set is both closed and open; it is an example of a "clopen" set. All its boundary points (of which there are none) are in the empty set, and the set is therefore closed; while for every one of its points (of which there are again none), there is an open neighbourhood in the empty set, and the set is therefore open. Moreover, the empty set is a compact set by the fact that every finite set is compact.
The closure of the empty set is empty. This is known as "preservation of nullary unions."
Category theory
If A is a set, then there exists precisely one function f from {} to A, the empty function. As a result, the empty set is the unique initial object of the category of sets and functions.
The empty set can be turned into a topological space, called the empty space, in just one way: by defining the empty set to be open. This empty topological space is the unique initial object in the category of topological spaces with continuous maps.
The empty set is more ever a strict initial object: only the empty set has a function to the empty set.
Questioned existence
Axiomatic set theory
In Zermelo set theory, the existence of the empty set is assured by the axiom of empty set, and its uniqueness follows from the axiom of extensionality. However, the axiom of empty set can be shown redundant in either of two ways:
There is already an axiom implying the existence of at least one set. Given such an axiom together with the axiom of separation, the existence of the empty set is easily proved.
In the presence of urelements, it is easy to prove that at least one set exists, viz. the set of all urelements. Again, given the axiom of separation, the empty set is easily proved.
Philosophical issues
While the empty set is a standard and widely accepted mathematical concept, it remains an ontological curiosity, whose meaning and usefulness are debated by philosophers and logicians.
The empty set is not the same thing as nothing; rather, it is a set with nothing inside it and a set is always something. This issue can be overcome by viewing a set as a bag—an empty bag undoubtedly still exists. Darling (2004) explains that the empty set is not nothing, but rather "the set of all triangles with four sides, the set of all numbers that are bigger than nine but smaller than eight, and the set of all opening moves in chess that involve a king."[4]
The popular syllogism
Nothing is better than eternal happiness; a ham sandwich is better than nothing; therefore, a ham sandwich is better than eternal happiness
is often used to demonstrate the philosophical relation between the concept of nothing and the empty set. Darling writes that the contrast can be seen by rewriting the statements "Nothing is better than eternal happiness" and "[A] ham sandwich is better than nothing" in a mathematical tone. According to Darling, the former is equivalent to "The set of all things that are better than eternal happiness is \emptyset" and the latter to "The set {ham sandwich} is better than the set \emptyset". It is noted that the first compares elements of sets, while the second compares the sets themselves.[4]
Jonathan Lowe argues that while the empty set:
"...was undoubtedly an important landmark in the history of mathematics, … we should not assume that its utility in calculation is dependent upon its actually denoting some object."
it is also the case that:
"All that we are ever informed about the empty set is that it (1) is a set, (2) has no members, and (3) is unique amongst sets in having no members. However, there are very many things that 'have no members', in the set-theoretical sense—namely, all non-sets. It is perfectly clear why these things have no members, for they are not sets. What is unclear is how there can be, uniquely amongst sets, a set which has no members. We cannot conjure such an entity into existence by mere stipulation."[5]
George Boolos argued that much of what has been heretofore obtained by set theory can just as easily be obtained by plural quantification over individuals, without reifying sets as singular entities having other entities as members.[6]
See also
Inhabited set
Nothing
Notes
Earliest Uses of Symbols of Set Theory and Logic.
Unicode Standard 5.2
Bruckner, A.N., Bruckner, J.B., and Thomson, B.S., 2008. Elementary Real Analysis, 2nd ed. Prentice Hall. P. 9.
D. J. Darling (2004). The universal book of mathematics. John Wiley and Sons. p. 106. ISBN 0-471-27047-4.
E. J. Lowe (2005). Locke. Routledge. p. 87.
*George Boolos, 1984, "To be is to be the value of a variable," The Journal of Philosophy 91: 430–49. Reprinted in his 1998 Logic, Logic and Logic (Richard Jeffrey, and Burgess, J., eds.) Harvard Univ. Press: 54–72.
References
Halmos, Paul, Naive Set Theory. Princeton, NJ: D. Van Nostrand Company, 1960. Reprinted by Springer-Verlag, New York, 1974. ISBN 0-387-90092-6 (Springer-Verlag edition). Reprinted by Martino Fine Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1-61427-131-4 (Paperback edition).
Jech, Thomas (2002), Set Theory, Springer Monographs in Mathematics (3rd millennium ed.), Springer, ISBN 3-540-44085-2
Graham, Malcolm (1975), Modern Elementary Mathematics (Hardcover) (2nd ed.), New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, ISBN 0155610392
Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Graduate Studies in Mathematics
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License