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14 votes
2 answers
1k views

If every definable class admits a group structure, must global choice hold?

It is a remarkable fact, due to Hajnal and Kertész and explained very well in this MathOverflow answer by user Ashutosh, that the axiom of choice is equivalent to the assertion that every nonempty set ...
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
347 views

Are there $2^{\aleph_0}$ pairwise non-isomorphic countable groups containing every finite group?

Let us call a group $(G,\cdot)$ finitarily complete if $G$ is countable, and every finite group is isomorphic to a subgroup of $(G,\cdot)$. Is there a collection of $2^{\aleph_0}$ pairwise non-...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
10 votes
2 answers
581 views

Maximal Abelian subgroups of $S_\omega$

Let $S_\omega$ be the group of permutations (bijections) $\varphi:\omega\to\omega$, together with composition as binary operation. Zorn's Lemma implies that every commutative subgroup of $S_\omega$ is ...
Dominic van der Zypen's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
294 views

Independence results on pure algebra

I think that the most celebrated result in this direction is Shelah's famous work on Whitehead's Problem: Is every abelian group $A$ such that $Ext^1(A, \mathbb{Z})=0$ free? This is known to be ...
jg1896's user avatar
  • 3,318
11 votes
0 answers
564 views

Isomorphic free groups have bijective generating sets

Let $F(X)$ be the free group on a set $X$. Classically, we can prove the statement: $F(X) \cong F(Y)$ if and only if $|X|=|Y|$. The proofs (that I have seen) consist of turning the group ...
Ali Caglayan's user avatar
  • 1,185
5 votes
0 answers
170 views

How much choice is required for a countably-infinite index subgroup of the real additive group?

The existence of such subgroups implies the existence of a non-measurable set; simply intersect each of the cosets with $[0,1]$. The results will all have equal outer measure, but their union will be ...
Keith Millar's user avatar
  • 1,252
7 votes
1 answer
601 views

Action of infinite symmetric groups on iterated power sets

Let $X$ be an infinite set, and $k \ge 1$ be a natural number. We work without the axiom of choice. Let $G_0$ be the full symmetric group on $X$, and let $G_1$ be the full symmetric group on ${\cal ...
Thomas Forster's user avatar
10 votes
0 answers
438 views

On the Number of Parallel Automorphism Lines

Given a group $G$, one can define the transfinite line of iterative automorphisms of $G$ to be the following chain of the groups where $G_{\alpha+1}=Aut(G_{\alpha})$ for each ordinal $\alpha$ and the ...
Morteza Azad's user avatar
35 votes
7 answers
4k views

Paradoxical Mathematical Objects Pending for Construction [duplicate]

The possible properties and applications of some mathematical objects have been described far before their rigorous mathematical definition. Some of them even had a seemingly paradoxical description ...
10 votes
1 answer
1k views

The Tall Tale of Terminating Transfinite Towers

The transfinite tower of iterative automorphisms of a group $G$ is simply definied to be the following chain of the groups where $G_{\alpha+1}=Aut(G_{\alpha})$ for each ordinal $\alpha$ and the direct ...
Morteza Azad's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
461 views

Automorphism of the transfinite rooted binary tree

I was studying combinatorical group theory recently, and I came across the infinite regular rooted binary tree and its automorphism group $Aut(T^{(2)})$with the Grigorchuk subgroup. Let me now ...
FusRoDah's user avatar
  • 3,738
35 votes
2 answers
3k views

Is Lagrange's Theorem equivalent to AC?

Lagrange's Theorem is most often stated for finite groups, but it has a natural formation for infinite groups too: if $G$ is a group and $H$ a subgroup of $G$, then $|G| = |G:H| \times |H|$. If we ...
Ben E's user avatar
  • 643
39 votes
5 answers
4k views

A “mother of all groups”? What kind of structures have "mother of all"s?

For ordered fields, we have a “mother of all ordered fields”, the surreal numbers $\mathbf{No}$, a proper-class “field” which includes (an isomorphic copy of) every other ordered field as a subfield. ...
The_Sympathizer's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
383 views

Universe-sized groups with only set-sized normal subgroups, their cardinality in a certain range

Let $\kappa$ be an inaccessible cardinal, and let $G$ be a group with $|G| \geq \kappa$. For any cardinal $\lambda \le \kappa$ (regular, say, but not necessary), say $G$ is $\lambda$-simple if for all ...
22 votes
2 answers
2k views

What is the largest Laver table which has been computed?

Richard Laver proved that there is a unique binary operation $*$ on $\{1,\ldots,2^n\}$ which satisfies $$a*1 \equiv a+1 \mod 2^n$$ $$a* (b* c) = (a* b) * (a * c).$$ This is the $n$th Laver table $(A_n,...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
15 votes
3 answers
2k views

Construction of a proper uncountable subgroup of $\mathbb{R}$ without Choice.

It is straightforward to construct proper uncountable subgroups of $\mathbb{R}$. One can construst a basis for $\mathbb{R}$ over $\mathbb{Q}$, and then there are many possibilities (just consider the ...
Owen Sizemore's user avatar
113 votes
2 answers
16k views

Does every non-empty set admit a group structure (in ZF)?

It is easy to see that in ZFC, any non-empty set $S$ admits a group structure: for finite $S$ identify $S$ with a cyclic group, and for infinite $S$, the set of finite subsets of $S$ with the binary ...
Konrad Swanepoel's user avatar