Axiom 2 actually axiomatizes that possibility away. It explicitly says that S cannot contain itself. For all intents and purposes, it turns S into a proper class.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 3:35 am The word "all" indicates that the set S also contains itself.
But a set cannot contain itself.
So, S does not contain itself. In general, there is no set that is allowed to contain S. Therefore, this axiom actually modifies the definition of every set. S is some kind of collection but not a set.
ZFC has this problem in general. The domain of sets is itself not a set. It is the universe of discourse for set theory, carefully designed as not being a set itself. That is an artificial hack.
In that sense, I do not consider the idea of the collection of all sets to be outlandish. For reasons of mere formalism, bureaucracy, and paradox avoidance, we strip it of its status of "set".