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by lmm
1312 days ago
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> I'm no expert, but I do want to point out that you'll never see a set of axioms for set theory that doesn't also presuppose some realm from which sets themselves are drawn. Huh? Of course you do; ZFC itself is such a set of axioms. There's no particular requirement on objects that can be members of sets (at least, nothing really goes wrong if they're not all sets), so the theory doesn't depend on anything else, in a very intuitive sense. |
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These quantifiers only "work" when there's a universe of entities to run over. This universe is not internal to set theory as an axiomatic system; the whole point of "non-standard models" is that we're looking for universes where the axioms of set theory hold, and yet are not what we normally think of when we reason using those axioms (e.g. "large cardinal" models).
Category theory can also be framed as a first-order theory. In its most common incarnation, it's a two-sorted first-order theory, with separate universes for objects and for arrows. This isn't essential; we can actually dispense with objects and work only with arrows. (Objects are then encoded as their identity arrows.) But it's a first-order theory either way; all the axioms of a category can be given with quantified formulas.
Group theory is also a first-order theory. When you specify a particular group, you give the universe over which its axioms quantify, and then prove(!) that those axioms hold on that universe. If you interpret group theory internal to set theory, then your universe will be a set; but the axioms don't care as long as quantification can be interpreted appropriately.