$P(\mathbb N)$ = power set of $\mathbb N$.
$A \subset P(\mathbb N)$ is a chain if $a,b \in A \implies$ either $a \subseteq b$ or $ b \subseteq a$
That is, we have something like this:
$$\cdots a \subseteq b \subseteq c \subseteq\cdots$$ where $a,b,c \in A$ are distinct.
We can show easy enough that there is an uncountable chain - this is done by noting $\mathbb N\sim\mathbb Q$ then using Dedekind cuts in $\mathbb Q$ to define $\mathbb R$ we see that a family of (nearly arbitrary) cuts satisfy the condition.
For instance the family $L_r=\{q \in \mathbb Q : q < r \}$ for $r > 0$ gives us the sets we need and obviously we can pick others.
I tried doing this for $ \mathbb R$ and don't seem to be getting anywhere.
To be more specific, does there exist a chain in $P(\mathbb R)$ with cardinality $2^ \mathbb R$? Given a set of cardinality $X$ (necessarily non-finite), is there a chain in $P(X)$ of the same cardinalty of $P(X)$?