A set is infinite if it is not finite.
The existence of an infinite set is usually given by an axiom of infinity. The main example is the set of natural numbers.
As you can see from finite set, there are at least five definitions of that term, which are all equivalent given the axiom of choice. The negation of any of these gives a definition of infinite set.
However, the definition usually used in practice in constructive mathematics is this:
A set is infinite if, given any natural number and a finite sequence of elements of , there exists an element of such that is always false.
In other words, given any function from a Kuratowski-finite set to , there exists an element of that is not in the image of . (Although because only the image matters, the definition would be equivalent if we required to be Bishop-finite, that is finite in the strictest sense.) This is essentially a variation of Richard Dedekind's definition of a Dedekind-infinite set.
Note that you can make this definition work without previously assuming the existence of natural numbers, by using an infinity-free definition of Kuratowski-finite set.
A set with a tight apartness relation is strongly infinite if, given any natural number and a finite sequence of elements of , there exists an element of such that .
Probably a lot to say about the relation between the various definitions of infinite set (the one above, the negations of the definitions of finite set, and others that might be studied). In the meantime, try the English Wikipedia.
Last revised on May 28, 2022 at 15:45:14. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.