According to my readings, Russell showed that a principle Frege used to reduce Peano arithmetic to logic lead to a contradiction. So, Russell tried to reduce mathematics to logic a different way but realized that he needed things such as an infinity axiom to get his reduction off the ground. But of course, that there are infinite collections is not just a matter of logic. So it seems that Russell just had to stipulate an infinity axiom. (This is just background.)
So, in modern set theory, is the axiom of infinity just stipulated? Or is there an argument for its truth?
Some directions:
G. Boolos derived the ZFC axioms from the iterative conception of set, and thus gave a motivation or argument in favor of the axiom of infinity.
Or, someone might think, as Cantor did, that all consistent mathematical results have (material?) instantiations in nature. Much of mathematics is dependent on the natural numbers, the real numbers, etc., and thus there is reason to accept axioms of infinity.
There are some similar threads to mine:
A finitist, who rejects the axiom of infinity, will be denied both the Dedekind and Cauchy constructions of real numbers. The problem? The reals are uncountable (Cantor showed this), and in a finitist's universe, the universe itself is countable.
$V_0=\varnothing$
$V_{n+1}= \mathscr P (V_n)$ where $\mathscr P$ denotes the powerset.
The universe if we accept the negation of the axiom of infinity is $V_\omega=\bigcup_{x\in\omega} V_x$, a countable union of at most countable sets.