Want to take part in these discussions? Sign in if you have an account, or apply for one below
Vanilla 1.1.10 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
If I have a well-ordered set , a countably infinite subset with the induced order and a given , what can we say about the subset ? What conditions are needed on or to say it is finite? Are there such conditions?
Edit: Hmm, I suppose could be and could be the top element, and then . I’m still interested in some formal conditions, and I feel my ordinal-fu is insufficient. This seems too much like a homework question, else I’d put it on MathOverflow.
I can’t think of anything you could say that would ensure it other than the tautological “there are only finitely many elements preceeding ”.
Could you say something like is the least element of the subset of all elements greater than , or is that equivalent to Mike’s tautology?
@Mike
I think you’re right. In the end I didn’t need this, and I’m sure glad I didn’t ask on MO!
1 to 4 of 4