Cumulative hierarchy

In mathematics, specifically set theory, a cumulative hierarchy is a family of sets indexed by ordinals such that

  • If is a limit ordinal, then

Some authors additionally require that .[citation needed]

The union of the sets of a cumulative hierarchy is often used as a model of set theory.[citation needed]

The phrase "the cumulative hierarchy" usually refers to the von Neumann universe, which has .

Reflection principle

A cumulative hierarchy satisfies a form of the reflection principle: any formula in the language of set theory that holds in the union of the hierarchy also holds in some stages .

Examples

  • The von Neumann universe is built from a cumulative hierarchy .
  • The sets of the constructible universe form a cumulative hierarchy.
  • The Boolean-valued models constructed by forcing are built using a cumulative hierarchy.
  • The well founded sets in a model of set theory (possibly not satisfying the axiom of foundation) form a cumulative hierarchy whose union satisfies the axiom of foundation.

References