Revision as of 09:35, 30 March 2007 by imported>Greg Woodhouse
Cantor's diagonal method provides a convenient proof that the set
of subsets of the natural numbers (also known as its power set is not countable. More generally, it is a recurring theme in computability theory.
The Argument
To any set
we may associate a function
by setting
if
and
, otherwise. Conversely, every such function defines a subset.
If power set is countable, there is a bijective map
, that allows us to assign an index
to every subset S. Assuming this has been done, we proceed to construct a function
such that the corresponding set,
cannot be in the range of
.
For each
, either
or
, and so we may simply
such that
.
It follows that
for any
, and it must therefore correspond to a set not in the range of
. This contradiction shows that
cannot be countable.