Explain what is meant by a well-ordering of a set.
Without assuming Zorn's Lemma, show that the power-set of any well-ordered set can be given a total (linear) ordering.
By a selection function for a set A, we mean a function f:PA→PA such that f(B)⊂B for all B⊂A,f(B)=∅ for all B=∅, and f(B)=B if B has more than one element. Suppose given a selection function f. Given a mapping g:α→[0,1] for some ordinal α, we define a subset B(f,g)⊂A recursively as follows:
B(f,g)=A if α=0,B(f,g)=f(B(f,g∣β)) if α=β+and g(β)=1B(f,g)=B(f,g∣β)\f(B(f,g∣β)) if α=β+and g(β)=0B(f,g)=⋂{B(f,g∣β)∣β<α} if α is a limit ordinal.
Show that, for any x∈A and any ordinal α, there exists a function g with domain α such that x∈B(f,g).
[It may help to observe that g is uniquely determined by x and α, though you need not show this explicitly.]
Show also that there exists α such that, for every g with domain α,B(f,g) is either empty or a singleton.
Deduce that the assertion 'Every set has a selection function' implies that every set can be totally ordered.
[Hartogs' Lemma may be assumed, provided you state it precisely.]