Ramsey's Theorem
Ramsey’s Theorem
Finite Version (Ramsey’s Theorem for Graphs)
For any integers $r, s \ge 2$, there exists an integer $R(r, s)$ such that any graph on at least $R(r, s)$ vertices contains either a clique of size $r$ or an independent set of size $s$.
Example
$R(3, 3) = 6$: In any party of six people, there are either three mutual acquaintances or three mutual strangers.
Infinite Version
Let $X$ be an infinite set. For any coloring of the $k$-element subsets of $X$ with finitely many colors, there exists an infinite subset $Y \subseteq X$ all of whose $k$-element subsets have the same color.
Known Ramsey Numbers
- $R(3, 3) = 6$
- $R(3, 4) = 9$
- $R(3, 5) = 14$
- $R(4, 4) = 18$
- $R(5, 5)$ is unknown (between 43 and 48)
Proof Ideas
The finite version is proved by induction on $r + s$, using the inequality
$$R(r, s) \le R(r-1, s) + R(r, s-1)$$Applications
- Combinatorics and extremal graph theory
- Logic and model theory
- Computer science (lower bounds)
- Number theory (Van der Waerden’s theorem)
Philosophical Interpretation
“Complete disorder is impossible” – any sufficiently large system contains ordered substructures.