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Freiling's axiom of symmetry : ウィキペディア英語版
Freiling's axiom of symmetry
Freiling's axiom of symmetry (''AX'') is a set-theoretic axiom proposed by Chris Freiling. It is based on intuition of Stuart Davidson
but the mathematics behind it goes back to Wacław Sierpiński.
Let ''A'' be the set of functions mapping real numbers in the unit interval () to countable subsets of the same interval. The axiom ''AX'' states:
:For every ''f'' in ''A'', there exist ''x'' and ''y'' such that ''x'' is not in ''f''(''y'') and ''y'' is not in ''f''(''x'').
A theorem of Sierpiński says that under the assumptions of ZFC set theory,
''AX'' is equivalent to the negation of the continuum hypothesis (CH). Sierpiński's theorem answered a question of Hugo Steinhaus and was proved long before the independence of CH had been established by
Kurt Gödel and Paul Cohen.
Freiling claims that probabilistic intuition strongly supports this proposition
while others disagree. There are several versions of the axiom, some of which
are discussed below.
==Freiling's argument==

Fix a function ''f'' in ''A''. We will consider a thought experiment that involves throwing two darts at the unit interval. We aren't able to physically determine with infinite accuracy the actual values of the numbers ''x'' and ''y'' that are hit. Likewise, the question of whether "''y'' is in ''f''(''x'')" cannot actually be physically computed. Nevertheless, if ''f'' really ''is'' a function, then this question is a meaningful one and will have a definite "yes" or "no" answer.
Now wait until after the first dart, ''x'', is thrown and then assess the chances that the second dart ''y'' will be in ''f''(''x''). Since ''x'' is now fixed, ''f''(''x'') is a fixed countable set and has Lebesgue measure zero. Therefore this event, with ''x'' fixed, has probability zero. Freiling now makes two generalizations:
* Since we can predict with virtual certainty that "''y'' is not in ''f''(''x'')" after the first dart is thrown, and since this prediction is valid no matter what the first dart does, we should be able to make this prediction before the first dart is thrown. This is not to say that we still have a measurable event, rather it is an intuition about the nature of being predictable.
* Since "''y'' is not in ''f''(''x'')" is predictably true, by the symmetry of the order in which the darts were thrown (hence the name "axiom of symmetry") we should also be able to predict with virtual certainty that "''x'' is not in ''f''(''y'')".
The axiom ''AX'' is now justified based on the principle that what will predictably happen every time this experiment is performed, should at the very least be possible. Hence there should exist two real numbers ''x'', ''y'' such that ''x'' is not in ''f''(''y'') and ''y'' is not in ''f''(''x'').

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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