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The Absolute Infinite is Georg Cantor's concept of an "infinity" that transcended the transfinite numbers. Cantor equated the Absolute Infinite with God. He held that the Absolute Infinite had various mathematical properties, including that every property of the Absolute Infinite is also held by some smaller object.
Cantor's viewCantor is quoted as saying:
Cantor also mentioned the idea in his famous letter to Richard Dedekind 28 July 1899 *:
The Burali-Forti paradoxThis seems paradoxical, and is closely related to Cesare Burali-Forti's "paradox" that there can be no greatest ordinal number. There is a quick fix in Zermelo's system by his Axiom of Separation, which stipulates that sets cannot be independently defined by any arbitrary logically definable notion, but must be separated as subsets of sets already "given". This, he says, eliminates contradictory ideas like "the set of all sets" or "the set of all ordinal numbers". But it is a philosophical problem. It is a problem for the view that a set of individuals must exist, so long as the individuals exist. Moreover, Zermelo's fix commits us to rather mysterious objects called "proper classes". The expression "x is a set" is the name of such a class, what sort of object is it? So is the object named by "x is a thing". Is it a thing or not? As A.W. Moore notes, there can be no end to the process of set formation, and thus no such thing as the totality of all sets, or the set hierarchy. Any such totality would itself have to be a set, thus lying somewhere within the hierarchy and thus failing to contain every set. Endnotes* Ivor Grattan-Guinness has shown that this "letter" is really an amalgam by Cantor's editor Ernst Zermelo of several letters written at different times (I. Grattan-Guinness, "The rediscovery of the Cantor-Dedekind Correspondence", Jahresbericht der deutschen Mathematik-Vereinigung 76, 104-139 See also
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