Section 11.5 Ramsey’s Theorem
By this time, you are probably not surprised to see that there is a very general form of Ramsey’s theorem. We have a bounded number of bins or colors and we are placing the subsets of a fixed size into these categories. The conclusion is that there is a large set which is treated uniformly.
Here’s the formal statement.
Theorem 11.6.
Let \(r\) and \(s\) be positive integers and let \(\mathbf{h}=(h_1,h_2,\dots,h_r)\) be a string of integers with \(h_i\ge s\) for each \(i=1,2,\dots,s\text{.}\) Then there exists a least positive integer \(R(s:h_1,h_2,\dots,h_r)\) so that if \(n\ge n_0\) and \(\phi:C([n],s]\longrightarrow [r]\) is any function, then there exists an integer \(\alpha\in[r]\) and a subset \(H_\alpha\subseteq [n]\) with \(|H_\alpha|=h_\alpha\) so that \(\phi(S)=\alpha\) for every \(S\in C(H_\alpha, s)\text{.}\)
We don’t include the proof of this general statement here, but the more ambitious students may attempt it on their own. Note that the case
\(s=1\) is just the
Pigeon Hole Principle, while the case
\(s=r=2\) is just
Ramsey’s Theorem for Graphs. An argument using double induction is required for the proof in the general case. The first induction is on
\(r\) and the second is on
\(s\text{.}\)
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