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I don't know if there's some standard symbol to represent the Power Set in Latex. According to Wikipedia there are some possibilities:

enter image description here

I think the first one would be the most appropriate because the second one is used for probability, the third one represents positive numbers, the forth one is the symbol for Weirstrass's elliptic functions, and the last one is used for structures and sigma-algebras. The problem is I think this first "p" is ugly, at least to my taste. I wish there was some alternative to it, for example I really love the symbol that Suppes and Halmos use in their books:

enter image description here

Does this symbol exist in any package?

Note: It would be nice if Weirstrass's symbol existed in form of uppercase letter, this would be a good alternative I think.

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    This question may help you. – Ruben Nov 14 '13 at 23:13
  • You may also take a look at http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/58098. – Sean Allred Nov 14 '13 at 23:24
  • That symbol is nice, but it belongs to a font that's not available. Unless somebody draws it and provides a suitable font there's not much one can do, apart using another calligraphic P. There's no ‘standard’ for symbols. – egreg Nov 14 '13 at 23:42
  • @egreg Looking up on the internet I have just found that the MnSymbol package includes \powerset . But this package apparently have some conflict with the definition of \mathfrak. what can I do to get this \powerset symbol? – Daniela Diaz Nov 14 '13 at 23:52
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    @DanielaDiaz Look at http://tex.stackexchange.com/q/14386 – egreg Nov 14 '13 at 23:57

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