I was reading The Joy of Cats, and on pg. 383 it goes:
Also Top is definable by topological axioms in Spa(F). However, a proper class of such axioms is needed.
Some random factoid, in context (pg. 219), also depends on how many measurable cardinals are assumed:
Prove that the following statements are equivalent:
- Set has a small codense subcategory,
- [T]here do not exist arbitrarily large measurable cardinals [equiv. there is not a proper class of them]; i.e., for some n, every ultrafilter closed under n-meets is closed under all meets.
So I suppose that we need not a proper class of axioms for measurable cardinals as such, although if we work with an axiom scheme of measurability, I guess we could have an arbitrary number of such axioms.
Anyway, how many axioms is too many? If the number of axioms not only equals the number of theorems, but even exceeds the possibilityX of more theorems than axioms as such, is that "too many"?
XHamkins lists, "Every proper class is bijective with Ord," as equivalent to AC under NGB. This indicates that it is possible to conceive of multiple "sizes" of absolute infinity, if we hold fast to, "A proper class is absolutely infinite." Or else proper classes wouldn't count as absolutely infinite, either (if they counted as having a "size" as such). At any rate, if X is a proper class of axioms and Y is a proper class of theorems, yet if global AC is dismissed (modulo NGB), would we have a possible discrepancy between the amount of axioms and the amount of theorems in play?