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==The article==
Cantor's article is short, less than four and a half pages.{{efn-ua|In letter to Dedekind dated December 25, 1873, Cantor states that he has written and submitted "a short paper" titled ''On a Property of the Set of All Real Algebraic Numbers''.
({{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|p=17}}; English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|p=847}}.)}} It begins with a discussion of the real [[algebraic number]]s and a statement of his first theorem: The set of real algebraic numbers can be put into [[one-to-one correspondence]] with the set of positive integers.<ref name=Cantor1874>{{harvnb|Cantor|1874}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|pp=840–843}}.</ref> Cantor restates this theorem in terms more familiar to mathematicians of his time: "The set of real algebraic numbers can be written as an infinite [[sequence]] in which each number appears only once."<ref name=Gray828>{{harvnb|Gray|1994|p=828}}.</ref>
Cantor's second theorem works with a [[closed interval]] [''a'', ''b''], which is the set of real numbers ≥ ''a'' and ≤ ''b''. The theorem states: Given any sequence of real numbers ''x''<sub>1</sub>, ''x''<sub>2</sub>, ''x''<sub>3</sub>, ... and any interval [''a'', ''b''], there is a number in [''a'', ''b''] that is not contained in the given sequence. Hence, there are infinitely many such numbers.<ref name=Ewald840_841>{{harvnb|Cantor|1874|p=259}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|pp=840–841}}.</ref>
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! style="background: f5f5f5;" |'''Proof that the number generated is {{sqrt|2}} − 1'''
|- style="text-align: left; vertical-align: top; background: white"
| style="padding-left: 1em; padding-right: 1em" |The proof uses [[Farey sequence]]s and [[simple continued
Cantor's construction produces mediants because the rational numbers were sequenced by increasing denominator. The first interval in the table is <math>(\frac{1}{3}, \frac{1}{2}).</math> Since <math>\frac{1}{3}</math> and <math>\frac{1}{2}</math> are adjacent in <math>F_3,</math> their mediant <math>\frac{2}{5}</math> is the first fraction in the sequence between <math>\frac{1}{3}</math> and <math>\frac{1}{2}.</math> Hence, <math>\frac{1}{3} < \frac{2}{5} < \frac{1}{2}.</math> In this inequality, <math>\frac{1}{2}</math> has the smallest denominator, so the second fraction is the mediant of <math>\frac{2}{5}</math> and <math>\frac{1}{2},</math> which equals <math>\frac{3}{7}.</math> This implies: <math>\frac{1}{3} < \frac{2}{5} < \frac{3}{7} < \frac{1}{2}.</math> Therefore, the next interval is <math>(\frac{2}{5}, \frac{3}{7}).</math>
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== Cantor's 1879 uncountability proof ==
=== Everywhere dense ===
In 1879, Cantor published a new uncountability proof that modifies his 1874 proof. He first defines the [[topological]] notion of a point set ''P'' being "everywhere [[dense set|dense]] in an interval":{{efn-ua|Cantor was not the first to define "everywhere dense" but his terminology was adopted with or without the "everywhere" (everywhere dense: {{harvnb|Arkhangel'skii|Fedorchuk|1990|p=15}}; dense: {{harvnb|Kelley|1991|p=49}}). In 1870, [[Hermann Hankel]] had defined this concept using different terminology: "a multitude of points
:If ''P'' lies partially or completely in the interval [α, β], then the remarkable case can happen that ''every'' interval [γ, δ] contained in [α, β], ''no matter how small,'' contains points of ''P''. In such a case, we will say that ''P'' is ''everywhere dense in the interval'' [α, β].{{efn-ua|Translated from {{harvnb|Cantor|1879|p=2}}: {{
In this discussion of Cantor's proof: ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'' are used instead of α, β, γ, δ. Also, Cantor only uses his interval notation if the first endpoint is less than the second. For this discussion, this means that (''a'', ''b'') implies ''a'' < ''b''.
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=== Cantor's 1879 proof ===
Cantor modified his 1874 proof with a new proof of its [[#Second theorem|second theorem]]: Given any sequence ''P'' of real numbers ''x''<sub>1</sub>, ''x''<sub>2</sub>, ''x''<sub>3</sub>, ... and any interval [''a'', ''b''], there is a number in [''a'', ''b''] that is not contained in ''P''. Cantor's new proof has only two cases. First, it handles the case of ''P'' not being dense in the interval, then it deals with the more difficult case of ''P'' being dense in the interval. This division into cases not only indicates which sequences are more difficult to handle, but it also reveals the important role denseness plays in the proof.<ref group=proof name=p>Since Cantor's proof has not been published in English, an English translation is given alongside the original German text, which is from {{harvnb|Cantor|1879|pp=5–7}}. The translation starts one sentence before the proof because this sentence mentions Cantor's 1874 proof. Cantor states it was printed in Borchardt's Journal.
{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
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{{space|12}}ω<sub>1</sub>, ω<sub>2</sub>, . . . , ω<sub>ν</sub>, . . .
|{{
. . . Dem widerspricht aber ein sehr allgemeiner Satz, welchen wir in Borchardt's Journal, Bd. 77, pag. 260, mit aller Strenge bewiesen haben, nämlich der folgende Satz:
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{{space|5}}''That if ν is an arbitrary whole number, the [real] quantity ω<sub>ν</sub> lies outside the interval [α<sup>(ν)</sup> . . . β<sup>(ν)</sup>].''
|{{
sicher Zahlen ''innerhalb'' des Intervalls (α . . . β) vorkommen, so muss eine von diesen Zahlen den ''kleinsten Index'' haben, sie sei ω<sub>κ<sub>1</sub></sub>, und eine andere: ω<sub>κ<sub>2</sub></sub> mit dem nächst grösseren Index behaftet sein.
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|[Page 7]<br>
{{space|5}}Since the numbers α', α<nowiki>''</nowiki>, α<nowiki>'''</nowiki>, . . ., α<sup>(ν)</sup>, . . . are continually increasing by value while simultaneously being enclosed in the interval [α, β], they have, by a well-known fundamental theorem of the theory of magnitudes [see note 2 below], a limit that we denote by A, so that:<br>
{{space|12}}{{nowrap|A
{{space|5}}The same applies to the numbers β', β<nowiki>''</nowiki>, β<nowiki>'''</nowiki>, . . ., β<sup>(ν)</sup>, . . ., which are continually decreasing and likewise lying in the interval [α, β]. We call their limit B, so that:<br>
{{space|12}}{{nowrap|B
{{space|5}}Obviously, one has:<br>
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to the assumption.
{{space|5}}Thus, there only remains the case A
{{space|12}}η
does ''not'' occur in our sequence (ω).
{{space|5}}If it were a member of our sequence, such as the ν<sup>th</sup>, then one would have: η
{{space|5}}But the latter equation is not possible for any value of ν because η is in the ''interior'' of the interval [α<sup>(ν)</sup>, β<sup>(ν)</sup>], but ω<sub>ν</sub> lies ''outside'' of it.
|{{
{{space|5}}Da die Zahlen α', α<nowiki>''</nowiki>, α<nowiki>'''</nowiki>, . . ., α<sup>(ν)</sup>, . . . ihrer Grösse nach fortwährend wachsen, dabei jedoch im Intervalle (α . . . β) eingeschlossen sind, so haben sie, nach einem bekannten Fundamentalsatze der Grössenlehre, eine Grenze, die wir mit A bezeichnen, so dass:<br>
{{space|12}}{{nowrap|A
{{space|5}}Ein Gleiches gilt für die Zahlen β', β<nowiki>''</nowiki>, β<nowiki>'''</nowiki>, . . ., β<sup>(ν)</sup>, . . . welche fortwährend abnehmen und dabei ebenfalls im Intervalle (α . . . β) liegen; wir nennen ihre Grenze B, so dass:<br>
{{space|12}}{{nowrap|B
{{space|5}}Man hat offenbar:<br>
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{{space|5}}Es ist aber leicht zu sehen, dass der Fall A < B hier ''nicht'' vorkommen kann; da sonst jede Zahl ω<sub>ν</sub>, unserer Reihe ''ausserhalb'' des Intervalles (A . . . B) liegen würde, indem ω<sub>ν</sub>, ausserhalb des Intervalls (α<sup>(ν)</sup> . . . β<sup>(ν)</sup>) gelegen ist; unsere Reihe (ω) wäre im Intervall (α . . . β) ''nicht überalldicht,'' gegen die Voraussetzung.
{{space|5}}Es bleibt daher nur der Fall A
{{space|12}}{{nowrap|η
in unserer Reihe (ω) ''nicht'' vorkommt.
{{space|5}}Denn, würde sie ein Glied unserer Reihe sein, etwa das ν<sup>te</sup>, so hätte man: η
{{space|5}}Die letztere Gleichung ist aber für keinen Werth von v möglich, weil η im ''Innern'' des Intervalls [α<sup>(ν)</sup>, β<sup>(ν)</sup>], ω<sub>ν</sub> aber ''ausserhalb'' desselben liegt.|label=none|italic=unset}}
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The development leading to Cantor's 1874 article appears in the correspondence between Cantor and [[Richard Dedekind]]. On November 29, 1873, Cantor asked Dedekind whether the collection of positive integers and the collection of positive real numbers "can be corresponded so that each individual of one collection corresponds to one and only one individual of the other?" Cantor added that collections having such a correspondence include the collection of positive rational numbers, and collections of the form (''a''<sub>''n''<sub>1</sub>, ''n''<sub>2</sub>, . . . , ''n''<sub>''ν''</sub></sub>) where ''n''<sub>1</sub>, ''n''<sub>2</sub>, . . . , ''n''<sub>''ν''</sub>, and ''ν'' are positive integers.<ref>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|pp=12–13}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Gray|1994|p=827}}; {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|p=844}}.</ref>
Dedekind replied that he was unable to answer Cantor's question, and said that it "did not deserve too much effort because it has no particular practical interest
{{Anchor|Cantor's December 2nd letter}}
On December 2, Cantor responded that his question does have interest: "It would be nice if it could be answered; for example, provided that it could be answered ''no'', one would have a new proof of [[Liouville number|Liouville's theorem]] that there are transcendental numbers."<ref>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|p=13}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Gray|1994|p=827}}.</ref>
On December 7, Cantor sent Dedekind a [[proof by contradiction]] that the set of real numbers is uncountable. Cantor starts by assuming that the real numbers in <math>[0,1]</math> can be written as a sequence. Then, he applies a construction to this sequence to produce a number in <math>[0,1]</math> that is not in the sequence, thus contradicting his assumption.<ref name=Dec7letter>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|pp=14–15}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|pp=845–846}}.</ref> Together, the letters of December 2 and 7 provide a non-constructive proof of the existence of transcendental numbers.<ref>{{harvnb|Gray|1994|p=827}}</ref> Also, the proof in Cantor's December
{{Anchor|Cantor's December 7, 1873 proof}}
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|}
Dedekind received Cantor's proof on December 8. On that same day, Dedekind simplified the proof and mailed his proof to Cantor. Cantor used Dedekind's proof in his article.<ref>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|p=19}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|p=849}}.</ref> The letter containing Cantor's December
On December 9, Cantor announced the theorem that allowed him to construct transcendental numbers as well as prove the uncountability of the set of real numbers:
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The non-constructive proof uses two proofs by contradiction:
# The proof by contradiction used to prove the uncountability theorem (see [[#Proof of Cantor's uncountability theorem|Proof of Cantor's uncountability theorem]]).
# The proof by contradiction used to prove the existence of transcendental numbers from the countability of the real algebraic numbers and the uncountability of real numbers. [[#Cantor's December 2nd letter|Cantor's December 2nd letter]] mentions this existence proof but does not contain it. Here is a proof: Assume that there are no transcendental numbers in [''a'', ''b'']. Then all the numbers in [''a'', ''b''] are algebraic. This implies that they form a [[subsequence]] of the sequence of all real algebraic numbers, which contradicts Cantor's uncountability theorem. Thus, the assumption that there are no transcendental numbers in [''a'', ''b''] is false. Therefore, there is a transcendental number in [''a'', ''b''].{{efn-ua|The beginning of this proof is derived from the proof below by restricting its numbers to the interval [''a'', ''b''] and by using a subsequence since Cantor was using sequences in his 1873 work on countability.<br>''German text:'' {{
Cantor chose to publish the constructive proof, which not only produces a transcendental number but is also shorter and avoids two proofs by contradiction. The non-constructive proof from Cantor's correspondence is simpler than the one above because it works with all the real numbers rather than the interval [''a'', ''b'']. This eliminates the subsequence step and all occurrences of [''a'', ''b''] in the second proof by contradiction.<ref name=Ewald840_841 />
== A misconception about Cantor's work ==
[[Akihiro Kanamori]], who specializes in set theory, stated that "Accounts of Cantor's work have mostly reversed the order for deducing the existence of transcendental numbers, establishing first the uncountability of the reals and only then drawing the existence conclusion from the countability of the algebraic numbers. In textbooks the inversion may be inevitable, but this has promoted the misconception that Cantor's arguments are non-constructive."<ref name=Kanamori4>{{harvnb|Kanamori|2012|p=4}}.</ref>
Cantor's published proof and the reverse-order proof both use the theorem: Given a sequence of reals, a real can be found that is not in the sequence. By applying this theorem to the sequence of real algebraic numbers, Cantor produced a transcendental number. He then proved that the reals are uncountable: Assume that there is a sequence containing all the reals. Applying the theorem to this sequence produces a real not in the sequence, contradicting the assumption that the sequence contains all the reals. Hence, the reals are uncountable.<ref name=Ewald840_841/> The reverse-order proof starts by first proving the reals are uncountable. It then proves that transcendental numbers exist: If there were no transcendental numbers, all the reals would be algebraic and hence countable, which contradicts what was just proved. This contradiction proves that transcendental numbers exist without constructing any.<ref name=Kanamori4/>
[[File:Oskar Perron.jpg|thumb|upright=0.93|alt=Oskar Perron reading a book while standing in front of a blackboard containing equations|Oskar Perron, {{spaces|4|hair}}c. 1948]]
The correspondence containing Cantor's non-constructive reasoning was published in 1937. By then, other mathematicians had rediscovered his non-constructive, reverse-order proof. As early as 1921, this proof was called "Cantor's proof" and criticized for not producing any transcendental numbers.<ref>{{harvnb|Gray|1994|pp=827–828}}.</ref> In that year, [[Oskar Perron]] gave the reverse-order proof and then stated: "
[[File:Adolf Abraham Halevi Fraenkel.jpg|thumb|upright=0.93|alt=refer to caption|Abraham Fraenkel, between 1939 and 1949]]
As early as 1930, some mathematicians have attempted to correct this misconception of Cantor's work. In that year, the set theorist [[Abraham Fraenkel]] stated that Cantor's method is "
Cantor's diagonal argument has often replaced his 1874 construction in expositions of his proof. The diagonal argument is constructive and produces a more efficient computer program than his 1874 construction. Using it, a computer program has been written that computes the digits of a transcendental number in [[polynomial time]]. The program that uses Cantor's 1874 construction requires at least [[sub-exponential time]].<ref>{{harvnb|Gray|1994|pp=821–824}}.</ref>{{efn-ua|The program using the diagonal method produces <math>n</math> digits in [[Big O notation#Use in computer science|<math>{\color{Blue}O}(n^2 \log^2 n \log \log n)</math>]] steps, while the program using the 1874 method requires at least <math>O(2^{\sqrt[3]{n}})</math> steps to produce <math>n</math> digits. ({{harvnb|Gray|1994|pp=822–823}}.)}}
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To explain these facts, historians have pointed to the influence of Cantor's former professors, [[Karl Weierstrass]] and Leopold Kronecker. Cantor discussed his results with Weierstrass on December 23, 1873.<ref name=Noether16_17>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|pp=16–17}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|p=847}}.</ref> Weierstrass was first amazed by the concept of countability, but then found the countability of the set of real algebraic numbers useful.<ref>{{harvnb|Grattan-Guinness|1971|p=124}}.</ref> Cantor did not want to publish yet, but Weierstrass felt that he must publish at least his results concerning the algebraic numbers.<ref name=Noether16_17 />
From his correspondence, it appears that Cantor only discussed his article with Weierstrass. However, Cantor told Dedekind: "The restriction which I have imposed on the published version of my investigations is caused in part by local circumstances
Weierstrass advised Cantor to leave his uncountability theorem out of the article he submitted, but Weierstrass also told Cantor that he could add it as a marginal note during proofreading, which he did.<ref name=Ferreiros184 /> It appears in a
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''b''<sub>∞</sub> = lim<sub>''n'' → ∞</sub> ''b<sub>n</sub>'' exist. Dedekind had used his "principle of continuity" to prove they exist. This principle (which is equivalent to the [[least upper bound property]] of the real numbers) comes from Dedekind's construction of the real numbers, a construction Kronecker did not accept.<ref>{{harvnb|Dauben|1979|pp=67–68}}.</ref>
Cantor restricted his first theorem to the set of real algebraic numbers even though Dedekind had sent him a proof that handled all algebraic numbers.<ref name=Noether18 /> Cantor did this for expository reasons and because of "local circumstances
==Dedekind's contributions to Cantor's article==
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Dedekind's second contribution is his proof of Cantor's second theorem. Dedekind sent this proof in reply to Cantor's letter that contained the uncountability theorem, which [[#Cantor's December 7, 1873 proof|Cantor proved]] using infinitely many sequences. Cantor next wrote that he had found a simpler proof that did not use infinitely many sequences.<ref>{{harvnb|Noether|Cavaillès|1937|pp=14–16, 19}}. English translation: {{harvnb|Ewald|1996|pp=845–847, 849}}.</ref> So Cantor had a choice of proofs and chose to publish Dedekind's.<ref>{{harvnb|Ferreirós|1993|pp=358–359}}.</ref>
Cantor thanked Dedekind privately for his help: "
==The legacy of Cantor's article==
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| publisher = Simon & Schuster
| ___location = New York
| year = 1937}}. Reprinted, 1984, {{isbn|978-0-671-62818-5}}.
* {{Citation | first1 = Garrett
| last1 = Birkhoff
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| publisher = Macmillan
| ___location = New York
| year = 1941}}. Reprinted, Taylor & Francis, 1997, {{isbn|978-1-56881-068-3}}.
* {{Citation | last = Burton
| first = David M.
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| journal = Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik
| year = 1878| doi = 10.1515/crll.1878.84.242
| doi-broken-date = 11 July 2025
}}.
* {{Citation | first = Georg
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| pages = 111–130
| year = 1971}}.
* {{Citation
| |last
|title
|url
|journal
|volume
|issue
|pages
|year
|doi
|mr
|zbl = 0827.01004
|jstor = 2975129
|access-date = 2016-02-13
|archive-date = 2022-01-21
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220121155859/https://www.maa.org/sites/default/files/pdf/upload_library/22/Ford/Gray819-832.pdf
|url-status = dead
}}.
* {{Citation | last1 = Hardy
| first1 = Godfrey
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| ___location = Oxford
| year = 1938
* {{Citation | last = Havil
| first = Julian
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|volume = I
|publisher = Addison-Wesley
|___location = Reading,
|year = 1956
}}. ([https://archive.org/details/topicsinnumberth0000leve Reprinted by Dover Publications], 2002, {{isbn|978-0-486-42539-9}}.)
* {{Citation | editor-last = Noether
| editor-first = Emmy
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| isbn = 978-1-58488-347-0}}.
{{Mathematical logic}}
[[Category:History of mathematics]]
▲[[Category:Set theory]]
[[Category:Real analysis]]
[[Category:
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