In axiomatic set theory and related branches of mathematics, the Von Neumann universe, or Von Neumann hierarchy of sets is the class of all sets, divided into a transfinite hierarchy of individual sets.
Note that every individual stage Va is a set, but their union V is a proper class. The sets in V are called hereditarily well-founded sets; the axiom of foundation guarantees that every set is hereditarily well founded. Given any set A, the smallest ordinal number i such that A belongs to Vi is the hereditary rank of A.
VonNeumann was invited to Princeton, New Jersey in 1930, and was one of four people selected for the first faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study (two of which were Albert Einstein and Kurt Gödel), where he was a mathematics professor from its formation in 1933 until his death.
VonNeumann was diagnosed with bone cancer or pancreatic cancer in 1957, possibly caused by exposure to radioactivity while observing A-bomb tests in the Pacific, and possibly in later work on nuclear weapons at Los Alamos, New Mexico.
VonNeumann had collaborated with the spy Klaus Fuchs on hydrogen bomb development, and the two filed a secret patent on "Improvement in Methods and Means for Utilizing Nuclear Energy" in 1946, which outlined a scheme for using an exploding fission bomb to compress fusion fuel before attempting to initiate a thermonuclear reaction.
In set theory and related branches of mathematics, the vonNeumannuniverse, or vonNeumann hierarchy of sets is the class of all sets, divided into a transfinite hierarchy of individual sets.
On the other hand, realists are more likely to see the vonNeumann hierarchy as something directly accessible to the intuition, and the axioms of ZFC as propositions for whose truth in V we can give direct intuitive arguments in natural language.
A possible middle position is that the mental picture of the vonNeumann hierarchy provides the ZFC axioms with a motivation (so that they are not arbitrary), but does not necessarily describe objects with real existence.