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| Mirrors > Home > MPE Home > Th. List > df-clab | Structured version Visualization version GIF version | ||
| Description: Define class
abstractions, that is, classes of the form {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑},
which is read "the class of sets 𝑦 such that 𝜑(𝑦)".
A few remarks are in order: 1. The axiomatic statement df-clab 2719 does not define the class abstraction {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} itself, that is, it does not have the form ⊢ {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} = ... that a standard definition should have (for a good reason: equality itself has not yet been defined or axiomatized for class abstractions; it is defined later in df-cleq 2732). Instead, df-clab 2719 has the form ⊢ (𝑥 ∈ {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} ↔ ...), meaning that it only defines what it means for a setvar to be a member of a class abstraction. As a consequence, one can say that df-clab 2719 defines class abstractions if and only if a class abstraction is completely determined by which elements belong to it, which is the content of the axiom of extensionality ax-ext 2712. Therefore, df-clab 2719 can be considered a definition only in systems that can prove ax-ext 2712 (and the necessary first-order logic). 2. As in all definitions, the definiendum (the left-hand side of the biconditional) has no disjoint variable conditions. In particular, the setvar variables 𝑥 and 𝑦 need not be distinct, and the formula 𝜑 may depend on both 𝑥 and 𝑦. This is necessary, as with all definitions, since if there was for instance a disjoint variable condition on 𝑥, 𝑦, then one could not do anything with expressions like 𝑥 ∈ {𝑥 ∣ 𝜑} which are sometimes useful to shorten proofs (because of abid 2722). Most often, however, 𝑥 does not occur in {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} and 𝑦 is free in 𝜑. 3. Remark 1 stresses that df-clab 2719 does not have the standard form of a definition for a class, but one could be led to think it has the standard form of a definition for a formula. However, it also fails that test since the membership predicate ∈ has already appeared earlier (outside of syntax e.g. in ax-8 2121). Indeed, the definiendum extends, or "overloads", the membership predicate ∈ from formulas of the form "setvar ∈ setvar" to formulas of the form "setvar ∈ class abstraction". This is possible because of wcel 2119 and cab 2718, and it can be called an "extension" of the membership predicate because of wel 2120, whose proof uses cv 1546. An a posteriori justification for cv 1546 is given by cvjust 2734, stating that every setvar can be written as a class abstraction (though conversely not every class abstraction is a set, as illustrated by Russell's paradox ru 3728). 4. Proof techniques. Because class variables can be substituted with compound expressions and setvar variables cannot, it is often useful to convert a theorem containing a free setvar variable to a more general version with a class variable. This is done with theorems such as vtoclg 3502 which is used, for example, to convert elirrv 9509 to elirr 9512. 5. Definition or axiom? The question arises with the three axiomatic statements introducing classes, df-clab 2719, df-cleq 2732, and df-clel 2815, to decide if they qualify as definitions or if they should be called axioms. Under the strict definition of "definition" (see conventions 30495), they are not definitions (see Remarks 1 and 3 above, and similarly for df-cleq 2732 and df-clel 2815). One could be less strict and decide to call "definition" every axiomatic statement which provides an eliminable and conservative extension of the considered axiom system. But the notion of conservativity may be given two different meanings in set.mm, due to the difference between the "scheme level" of set.mm and the "object level" of classical treatments. For a proof that these three axiomatic statements yield an eliminable and weakly (that is, object-level) conservative extension of FOL= plus ax-ext 2712, see Appendix of [Levy] p. 357. 6. References and history. The concept of class abstraction dates back to at least Frege, and is used by Whitehead and Russell. This definition is Definition 2.1 of [Quine] p. 16 and Axiom 4.3.1 of [Levy] p. 12. It is called the "axiom of class comprehension" by [Levy] p. 358, who treats the theory of classes as an extralogical extension to predicate logic and set theory axioms. He calls the construction {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} a "class term". For a full description of how classes are introduced and how to recover the primitive language, see the books of Quine and Levy (and the comment of eqabb 2879 for a quick overview). For a general discussion of the theory of classes, see mmset.html#class 2879. (Contributed by NM, 26-May-1993.) (Revised by BJ, 19-Aug-2023.) |
| Ref | Expression |
|---|---|
| df-clab | ⊢ (𝑥 ∈ {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} ↔ [𝑥 / 𝑦]𝜑) |
| Step | Hyp | Ref | Expression |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | vx | . . . 4 setvar 𝑥 | |
| 2 | 1 | cv 1546 | . . 3 class 𝑥 |
| 3 | wph | . . . 4 wff 𝜑 | |
| 4 | vy | . . . 4 setvar 𝑦 | |
| 5 | 3, 4 | cab 2718 | . . 3 class {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} |
| 6 | 2, 5 | wcel 2119 | . 2 wff 𝑥 ∈ {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} |
| 7 | 3, 4, 1 | wsb 2073 | . 2 wff [𝑥 / 𝑦]𝜑 |
| 8 | 6, 7 | wb 207 | 1 wff (𝑥 ∈ {𝑦 ∣ 𝜑} ↔ [𝑥 / 𝑦]𝜑) |
| Colors of variables: wff setvar class |
| This definition is referenced by: eleq1ab 2720 abid 2722 vexwt 2723 vexw 2724 nfsab1 2726 hbab 2728 hbabg 2729 cvjust 2734 abbi 2805 abbib 2809 cbvabv 2810 cbvabw 2811 cbvab 2812 eqabbw 2813 eqabdv 2873 clelab 2884 nfaba1 2910 nfabdw 2923 nfabd 2924 rabrabi 3411 abv 3444 abvALT 3445 elab6g 3614 elabgw 3622 elrabi 3632 ralab 3641 dfsbcq2 3733 sbc8g 3738 sbcimdv 3798 sbcg 3802 csbied 3874 dfss2 3908 ss2abim 3998 ss2abdv 4003 unabw 4242 unab 4243 inab 4244 difab 4245 notabw 4248 noel 4273 ab0w 4314 csbab 4375 exss 5409 iotaeq 6460 abrexex2g 7913 opabex3d 7914 opabex3rd 7915 opabex3 7916 axregs 35330 xpab 35955 in-ax8 36453 ss-ax8 36454 cbvabdavw 36485 mh-setind 36765 regsfromunir1 36769 bj-dfsbc 36993 eliminable1 37213 eliminable-velab 37219 bj-ab0 37262 bj-elabd2ALT 37279 bj-gabima 37294 bj-snsetex 37317 wl-df-clab 37867 wl-df.clab 37870 wl-clabv 37956 wl-clabtv 37958 wl-clabt 37959 scottabf 44685 |
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