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I am currently aware of only two infinite cardinalities:

  • $\aleph_0 = |\Bbb N|$
  • $\aleph_1 = |\Bbb R|$

Questions:

  1. Is there an infinite number of infinite cardinalities?
  2. If yes, is this set of cardinalities countable or uncountable?

I know that $\aleph_0<\aleph_1$ and I would tend to guess that the set of infinite cardinalities is countable at most (or possibly even finite), since there is no known element $K$ such that $\aleph_0<K<\aleph_1$.

BTW, are there any other acceptable operations (such as $+,-,\times,/$) between elements in this set?

Thanks

Asaf Karagila
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barak manos
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    $|\mathbb{R}|= \aleph_1$ is an undecidable assertion, and by definition there is no $\kappa$ such that $\aleph_0<\kappa<\aleph_1$ – ocg Mar 27 '14 at 11:09
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  • Yes, by Cantor's theorem.
  • No. Class of all cardinals is not even a set!
  • – Hanul Jeon Mar 27 '14 at 11:10
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  • Because $\mathcal{P}(X)$ is always larger than $X$, you can easily get a countable number of cardinalities just by defining $X_0=\mathbb{N}$ and $X_i=\mathcal{P}(X_{i-1}$.
  • – JiK Mar 27 '14 at 11:10
  • @Julien Godawatta : Thanks. By definition? I thought that this was an unproved hypothesis... – barak manos Mar 27 '14 at 11:21
  • @tetori: Thanks. Why is it not a set? – barak manos Mar 27 '14 at 11:22
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    @barakmanos Because the Cantor's paradox, this class is not a set. – Hanul Jeon Mar 27 '14 at 11:24
  • @barakmanos $\aleph_1$ is the successor cardinal of $\aleph_0$. – ocg Mar 27 '14 at 11:26
  • @Julien Godawatta: Thanks. I meant "no $K$ such that $|N| < K < |R|$". – barak manos Mar 27 '14 at 11:28
  • Next time please try to search the site first. Some threads answering this question are: This thread and this thread and this thread and this thread and that thread. (Note that one of these is in fact the first question posted on the site.) – Asaf Karagila Mar 27 '14 at 17:50