My question is stated in bold text.
This question pertains to the following formulation of Peano's axioms used to formalize an introduction of the natural numbers (beginning with 1) consisting of successions of vertical strokes drawn on paper in horizontal rows.
- I. $1$ is a number.
- II. To every number $a$ there corresponds a unique number $a^{\prime},$ called its successor.
- III. If $a^{\prime}=b^{\prime},$ then $a=b.$
IV. $a^{\prime}\ne1$ for every number $a.$
V. Let $A\left(x\right)$ be a proposition containing the variable $x.$ If $A\left(1\right)$ holds and if $A\left(n^{\prime}\right)$ follows from $A\left(n\right)$ for every number $n,$ then $A\left(x\right)$ holds for every number $x.$
Are these axioms sufficient to determine the natural numbers $\mathbb{N}\equiv\left\{ 1,2,3,\dots\right\} ?$ Or is it necessary to add a further requirement that a number must inherit its membership in $\mathbb{N}$ from $1?$
For example, it seems that the set $\mathcal{N}=\mathbb{N}\cup\left\{ h\vert i\in\mathbb{Z}\land h=i+\frac{1}{2}\right\} $ is consistent with these axioms, with $a^{\prime}\equiv a+1,$ in the standard sense.
I propose that the following statement would fulfill such a requirement: The set of natural numbers contains the number $1$ as well as every number reached successively beginning with $1,$ with succession conforming to Peano's axioms as stated.
That avoids explicit reference to a "successor function", which would require additional definitions. Nonetheless, any such requirement stated in addition to Peano's axioms seems to presuppose ordering. Terms such as beginning with, repeated application, successively, inherited from, etc., appeal to our a priori notions of ordering. So I'm left wondering to what extent our subsequent theorems pertaining to ordering are actually derived results.