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Set Theory for Physicists

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10 May 2019


SCIENCE / Physics / Mathematical & Computational

Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Author Biography
1 Equality ‘=’
2 Fundamental Properties of Sets
2.1 What is a Set?
2.2 Defining a Set
2.3 Equality of Sets
2.4 A Set Can Be an Element of Another Set
2.5 A Set Cannot Contain Itself
2.6 A Set Can Be Empty (Null )
2.7 Subsets
2.7.1 Definition of Subsets
2.7.2 A ⊂ A
2.7.3 ∅ ⊂ A
3 Set Operators
3.1 What is a set operator?
3.2 The ∪ Operator (UNION)
3.2.1 The Commutative Property of ∪
3.2.2 The Associative Property of ∪
3.2.3 The ∪ operator and the empty set ∅
3.3 The ∩ Operator (INTERSECTION)
3.3.1 The Commutative Property of ∩
3.3.2 The Associative Property of ∩
3.3.3 The ∩ operator and the empty set ∅
3.4 Mixed Properties of ∪ and ∩
3.5 The \ Operator (SET SUBSTRACTION)
3.5.1 The \ operator and the empty set ∅
3.6 Mixed Properties of \ , ∪ and ∩
3.7 The × Operator (CARTESIAN PRODUCT)
3.7.1 The × operator and the empty set ∅
4 Universal Set Systems
4.1 What is a Universal Set?
4.2 Complement
4.3 Properties of the Complement
5 Relations and Functions
5.1 What is a Relation?
5.2 One-to-one Relations
5.3 What is a Function?
6 Equivalence Relations and Classes
6.1 What is an Equivalence Relation?
6.2 What is an Equivalence Class?
7 Mathematical Theory
7.1 Axiomatic Definitions and Definitions
7.2 Axioms and Theorems
8 Appendix
8.1 General Equations of Set Theory
8.2 Universal Set Systems
8.3 Relations and Functions
8.3.1 Relations
8.3.2 One-to-one Relations
8.3.3 Functions
8.4 Equivalence Relations and Classes
8.4.1 Equivalence Relations
8.4.2 Equivalence Classes