We have the following indirect implication of form equivalence classes:

213 \(\Rightarrow\) 47-n
given by the following sequence of implications, with a reference to its direct proof:

Implication Reference
213 \(\Rightarrow\) 85 clear
85 \(\Rightarrow\) 62 clear
62 \(\Rightarrow\) 61 clear
61 \(\Rightarrow\) 45-n clear
45-n \(\Rightarrow\) 33-n clear
33-n \(\Rightarrow\) 47-n clear

Here are the links and statements of the form equivalence classes referenced above:

Howard-Rubin Number Statement
213:

\(C(\infty,\aleph_{1})\): If \((\forall y\in X)(|y| = \aleph_{1})\) then \(X\) has a choice function.

85:

\(C(\infty,\aleph_{0})\):  Every family of denumerable sets has  a choice function.  Jech [1973b] p 115 prob 7.13.

62:

\(C(\infty,< \aleph_{0})\):  Every set of non-empty finite  sets  has  a choice function.

61:

\((\forall n\in\omega, n\ge 2\))\((C(\infty,n))\): For each \(n\in\omega\), \(n\ge 2\), every set of \(n\) element  sets has a choice function.

45-n:

If \(n\in\omega-\{0,1\}\), \(C(\infty,n)\): Every set of \(n\)-element sets has a choice function.

33-n:

If \(n\in\omega-\{0,1\}\), \(C(LO,n)\):  Every linearly ordered set of \(n\) element sets has  a choice function.

47-n:

If \(n\in\omega-\{0,1\}\), \(C(WO,n)\): Every well ordered collection of \(n\)-element sets has a choice function.

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