mathman said:
No - they are independent of each other.
Could you back up your first statement?
Sure.
Assume the Continuum Hypothesis and map the real numbers from 0 to 1 bijectively onto the first uncountable ordinal.
In the unit square, define the function f(x,y) = 1 if x<y in the induced ordering, 0 otherwise.
f is the characteristic function of the set (x,y) with x<y so this set is measurable if f is a measurable function. If f is measurable then we can integrate it and find the measure of the set. By Fubini's theorem we can calculate the integral as a double integral and can integrate along either the x or y-axis first and get the same answer.
Intgerating along the x-axis first:
For each y, there are only countable many x < y since the ordering is onto the first uncountable ordinal. Thus the integral of f over the x-axis is zero since any countable set has measure zero. The double integral is thus zero.
Integrating along the y-axis first:
For each x, there are only countable many y less that it so the measure of the set of y greater than x is 1. Thus the integral along the y-axis is 1 for each fixed x. Thus the double integral equals 1.
This contradicts Fubini's Theorem so f is not measurable.