According to Wikipedia, there are uncountably many countable ordinals. What is the easiest way to see this? If I construct ordinals in the standard way, $$1,\ 2,\ \ldots,\ \omega,\ \omega +1,\ \omega +2,\ \ldots,\ \omega\cdot 2,\ \omega\cdot 2 +1,\ \ldots,\ \omega^{2},\ \ldots,\ \omega^{3},\ \ldots\ \omega^{\omega},\ \ldots,\ \omega^{\omega^{\omega}},\ \ldots, \epsilon_{0},\ \ldots$$ I seem to get only countably many countable ordinals.
Uncountability of countable ordinals
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3Ask Google: `first uncountable ordinal` immediately gives [this](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_uncountable_ordinal), see also [this](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_countable_ordinal) – 2011-10-11
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6But you were [just told](http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/71596/mechanical-definition-of-ordinals) that this is not an adequate construction of all ordinals, much less a "standard way" to construct them. – 2011-10-11
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0Of course there are only countably many ordinals with names, since there are countably many names :) – 2012-06-02
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0I think for some audiences, none of the answers to this question are satisfactory and this question needs an answer that breaks the intuition that because you can never think of uncountably many ordinal numbers as you think of stronger systems of ordinal numbers, all ordinal numbers are countable. Maybe somebody can write an answer that breaks that intuition just like Asaf Karagila's answer to "ZF — Sets that can be proven to exist" breaks the intuition that there are only countably many sets. – 2018-04-16
5 Answers
Let $\alpha$ be the set of all countable ordinals.
It is an ordinal : if $\beta \in \alpha$, then $\beta \subset \alpha$ because the elements of $\beta$ are countable ordinals.
It is uncountable : if it were countable, $\alpha$ would be a member of itself, so there would be an infinite descending sequence of ordinals.
Therefore, $\alpha$, the set of all countable ordinals, is the smallest uncountable ordinal.
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2I think you have to do a little bit more work to say that $\alpha$ is the *smallest* uncountable ordinal. The argument above only shows that it's uncountable. – 2011-10-11
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7@kahen, the ordinals are well-ordered by $\in$, so every ordinal smaller than $\alpha$ is a _member_ of $\alpha$ and thus, by definition, countable. – 2011-10-11
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1This answer and the (essentially equivalent) one by Asaf Karagila rely on conventions unknown to Cantor. But Cantor proved that the set of all countable ordinals is uncountable. There should be a way to do this that doesn't require encoding ordinals as von Neumann ordinals. – 2011-10-12
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2The problem with this argument is that you didn't prove that there is a set of all countable ordinal numbers. You could apply the same argument to the set of all ordinal numbers to derive the Burali-Forti paradox. See https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/216229/other-ways-of-proving-that-the-set-of-all-countable-ordinals-is-uncountable. For those who have already learned that it has been proven without the axiom of choice that uncountable ordinal numbers exist, this answer might be good enough. – 2017-10-29
Fact: If $A$ is a set of ordinals which is downwards closed, then $A$ is an ordinal.
Now consider the following set: $A=\{\alpha\mid\exists f\colon\alpha\to\omega,\ f \text{ injective}\}$, this is the set of all countable ordinals.
If $\alpha\in A$ then clearly $\beta<\alpha$ implies $\beta\in A$, simply because $\beta\subseteq\alpha$. We have, if so, that $A$ is itself an ordinal. If $A$ was a countable ordinal then $A\in A$, which is a contradiction. Therefore $A$ is uncountable, in fact $A$ is the least uncountable ordinal, also known as $\omega_1$.
There are just many ordinals which you cannot describe nicely. It just shows you that you can well order a countable set in so many ways...
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0I'm confused by the fact: is $\{ \{ \emptyset \} \}$ not downwards closed? Meaning it has a least element with respect to $\in$, or what does downwards closed mean? – 2012-01-17
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2$\{\{\varnothing\}\}=\{1\}$ is *not* downwards closed. $A$ is downwards closed if $\beta\in A,\alpha<\beta\rightarrow\alpha\in A$. In the case of ordinals, which are transitive sets this is the same as to say $\beta\in A\rightarrow\beta\subseteq A$. – 2012-01-17
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0Ah, I didn't know what downwards closed means. Thanks, Asaf! – 2012-01-17
I have searched and searched for an answer to this question that makes intuitive sense and have yet to find one. So, after some thought of my own, this is what I came up with.
Suppose that the countable ordinals were countable. Let f be a one-to-one correspondence between the natural numbers and every well-ordering of the natural numbers. For instance:
1 <--> 1 < 3 < 5 <... 2 < 4 < 6 <...
2 <--> 1 < 2 < 3 < 4 <...
3 <--> 1 < 2 < 4 < 8 <... 3 < 6 <... 5 < 10 <...
...
Then, you only need to show there is a well-ordering of the natural numbers that is not on this list.
For each natural number $n$, let $f(n)$ be the order type of the ordering corresponding to $n$. Following the example list above, $f(1) = \omega*2$, $f(2) = \omega$, $f(3) = \omega^2$, and so on. Define an ordering on the natural numbers from $m < n$ iff $f(m) < f(n)$. This ordering of the natural numbers is a well-ordering since the ordering of the ordinals is a well-ordering. Therefore, it has some order type, call it $\alpha$. For all $n$, $f(n) < \alpha$, which follows from each ordinal being order-isomorphic to the ordered set of ordinals less than it. We are assuming $\alpha$ is countable, so it must be somewhere in our list, say $f(n) = \alpha$. But $f(n) < \alpha$ also, which is the contradiction we want. Therefore, $\alpha$ is nowhere on the list. Therefore, the countable ordinals are uncountable.
As far as whether the countable ordinals are the first uncountable ordinal, use again the fact that each ordinal is order-isomorphic to the ordered set of ordinals less than it. The order type of the countable ordinals must be the first uncountable ordinal, because all ordinals less than it are countable, from the order-isomorphism with the countable ordinals.
I will prove without assuming the axiom of choice that there are uncountably many countable ordinals. First, I will show that there is a set of all countable ordinals.
Take the set of all well-ordering relations on the set of all natural numbers. Let $f$ be the function that assigns to each of the relations in that set its order type. By the axiom of replacement, there is a set of all images of that function, and that's the set of all infinite countable ordinals. By the axiom of union, the union of that set and the set of all finite ordinals is also a set, and that's the set of all countable ordinals.
By definition, $\omega_1$ is the smallest ordinal such that the set of all ordinal numbers smaller than it is uncountable if such an ordinal exists. The supremum of the set of all countable ordinals is $\omega_1$ so $\omega_1$ exists. Therefore, the set of all countable ordinals is uncountable.
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0Comments are for suggesting how to improve a question or answer so I don't see how this answer would be suitable as a comment. Is it that Stack Exchange is for really good experts who find marcio's answer satisfactory because they're quite well aware that's it's even a theorem of ZF let alone ZFC that $\omega_1$ exists? Also, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_number gives an alternate equivalent definition of an ordinal number which is the definition I used. – 2017-12-17
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1If $\omega_1$ does not exist, then the collection of countable ordinals is not even a set, let alone a countable set. Your answer here is irrelevant. – 2017-12-17
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0I don't see what's wrong with my answer. Don't I need to show that there is a set of all countable ordinals to show that there are uncountably many countable ordinals. – 2017-12-18
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1No, you don't. Saying something is countable automatically implies it is a set. If there is no set of countable ordinals, then there are uncountably many of them. As a side note, insisting on working without choice is not always the right thing, and certainly not from a pedagogical point of view. Yes, some things deserve to be mentioned, but sometimes comments are enough. – 2017-12-18
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0@AsafKaragila A lot of people might think saying "there are uncountably many ordinals" is another way of saying "the set of all countable ordinals is uncountable" and like my answer for that reason. For those who know it really means "there is no countable set of all ordinals", my answer also proves the answer to that interpretation of the question is yes. Also, the body of the question seemed to ask how can it be that uncountable ordinals exist and my answer proves they exist. – 2018-01-22
Not sure, if people aren't making this too difficult by looking at a generalized case.
If you look at the successor cardinal of Omega, it is the union of all ordinals lower than itself. If there only were countably many, then it would be a union of countably many countable sets, hence countable itself.
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1It could be that there is no set of all countable ordinals, so that all ordinals are countable. What does your sketch do in that case? – 2018-11-22
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0By Omega, do you mean $\omega$? Omega ($\Omega$) tends to mean something else. You talk of the successor cardinal of $\Omega$, so you seem to be already assuming its existence. – 2018-11-22
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0Without the axiom of choice, it is possible that some countable unions of countable sets are uncountable. Your argument does not seem to address this option, and yet the existence of $\omega_1$ does not require the axiom of choice. – 2018-11-22