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Bloch's principle

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Bloch's Principle is a philosophical principle in mathematics stated by Andr Bloch.
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Bloch states the principle in Latin as: Nihil est in infinito quod non prius fuerit in finito, and explains
this as follows: Every proposition in whose statement the actual infinity occurs can be always
considered a consequence, almost immediate, of a proposition where it does not occur, a
proposition in finite terms.
Bloch mainly applied this principle to the theory of functions of a complex variable. Thus, for
example, according to this principle, Picard's theorem corresponds to Schottky's theorem,
and Valiron's theorem corresponds to Bloch's theorem.
Based on his Principle, Bloch was able to predict or conjecture several important results such as
the Ahlfors's Five Islands theorem, Cartan's theorem on holomorphic curves omitting
hyperplanes,
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Hayman's result that an exceptional set of radii is unavoidable in Nevanlinna theory.
In the more recent times several general theorems were proved which can be regarded as rigorous
statements in the spirit of the Bloch Principle.
Zalcman's lemma[edit]
Let be a sequence of meromorphic functions in a region D, which is not a normal family. Then
there exist a sequence of points in D and positive numbers with such that

where f is a non-constant meromorphic function in the complex plane.
[3]

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