Is the following statement provable in $\mathsf{ZF}$?
For every family $\mathcal{A}$ of sets, if $\mathcal{A}$ is closed under unions of chains and $\bigcup\mathcal{A}$ is well-orderable, then $\mathcal{A}$ has a $\subseteq$-maximal member.
Is the following statement provable in $\mathsf{ZF}$?
For every family $\mathcal{A}$ of sets, if $\mathcal{A}$ is closed under unions of chains and $\bigcup\mathcal{A}$ is well-orderable, then $\mathcal{A}$ has a $\subseteq$-maximal member.
No, this principle implies $\mathrm{DC}(\mathbb{R}).$ Suppose $T$ is a tree on $\mathbb{R}^{<\omega}$ with no leaves or branches. Let $\mathcal{A}$ consist of all $A \subset \omega \times \omega$ such that for some $\langle r_i: i<n \rangle \in T,$ $$A=\{(2i, j): i < n, j \in r_i\} \cup \{(2i+1, k): i<n, k \not \in r_i\}.$$
Then $\mathcal{A}$ has no infinite chains or maximal elements.
This generalizes to proving $\mathrm{DC}_{\kappa}(\mathcal{P}(\kappa))$ for all $\kappa,$ so, over a base theory of ZF - Foundation, this proves the pure axiom of choice, i.e. that the well-founded universe satisfies AC. In fact, the principle is equivalent to pure choice since it lives inside the well-founded universe.
Suppose that there is a Dedekind-finite set of reals, $A$. Enumerate the rational numbers as $\{q_n\mid n<\omega\}$, and for each $a\in A$ let $D_a\subseteq\omega$ be a recursively chosen subset such that $\{q_n\mid n\in D_a\}$ is a monotone sequence converging to $a$ from below in the interval $(a-1,a)$. Then $\{D_a\mid a\in A\}$ is an almost disjoint family.
Let $\cal A$ be all the finite unions of these $D_a$s, trivially $\bigcup\cal A$ is well-orderable. Easily, there is no maximal element in $\cal A$, since any finite union is missing out on "most" integers.
But I claim that it is closed under unions of chains. Simply because $\cal A$ is Dedekind-finite and well-founded under $\subseteq$. To see this, note that we can identify from any given $X\in\cal A$ which real numbers were involved in creating it, so there is a bijection between $X$ and $[A]^{<\omega}$, which itself is Dedekind-finite since $A$ can be linearly ordered.