The fixed-point lemma for normal functions is a basic result in axiomatic set theory stating that any normal function has arbitrarily large fixed points (Levy 1979: p. 117). It was first proved by Oswald Veblen in 1908.
A normal function is a class function f {\displaystyle f} from the class Ord of ordinal numbers to itself such that:
It can be shown that if f {\displaystyle f} is normal then f {\displaystyle f} commutes with suprema; for any nonempty set A {\displaystyle A} of ordinals,
Indeed, if sup A {\displaystyle \sup A} is a successor ordinal then sup A {\displaystyle \sup A} is an element of A {\displaystyle A} and the equality follows from the increasing property of f {\displaystyle f} . If sup A {\displaystyle \sup A} is a limit ordinal then the equality follows from the continuous property of f {\displaystyle f} .
A fixed point of a normal function is an ordinal β {\displaystyle \beta } such that f ( β ) = β {\displaystyle f(\beta )=\beta } .
The fixed point lemma states that the class of fixed points of any normal function is nonempty and in fact is unbounded: given any ordinal α {\displaystyle \alpha } , there exists an ordinal β {\displaystyle \beta } such that β ≥ α {\displaystyle \beta \geq \alpha } and f ( β ) = β {\displaystyle f(\beta )=\beta } .
The continuity of the normal function implies the class of fixed points is closed (the supremum of any subset of the class of fixed points is again a fixed point). Thus the fixed point lemma is equivalent to the statement that the fixed points of a normal function form a closed and unbounded class.
The first step of the proof is to verify that f ( γ ) ≥ γ {\displaystyle f(\gamma )\geq \gamma } for all ordinals γ {\displaystyle \gamma } and that f {\displaystyle f} commutes with suprema. Given these results, inductively define an increasing sequence ⟨ α n ⟩ n < ω {\displaystyle \langle \alpha _{n}\rangle _{n<\omega }} by setting α 0 = α {\displaystyle \alpha _{0}=\alpha } , and α n + 1 = f ( α n ) {\displaystyle \alpha _{n+1}=f(\alpha _{n})} for n ∈ ω {\displaystyle n\in \omega } . Let β = sup n < ω α n {\displaystyle \beta =\sup _{n<\omega }\alpha _{n}} , so β ≥ α {\displaystyle \beta \geq \alpha } . Moreover, because f {\displaystyle f} commutes with suprema,
The last equality follows from the fact that the sequence ⟨ α n ⟩ n {\displaystyle \langle \alpha _{n}\rangle _{n}} increases. ◻ {\displaystyle \square }
As an aside, it can be demonstrated that the β {\displaystyle \beta } found in this way is the smallest fixed point greater than or equal to α {\displaystyle \alpha } .
The function f : Ord → Ord, f(α) = ωα is normal (see initial ordinal). Thus, there exists an ordinal θ such that θ = ωθ. In fact, the lemma shows that there is a closed, unbounded class of such θ.