To continue coming up with new names for the sets would be difficult. The hierarchy of alephs is sometimes referred to as an ascending tower, so I selected [math]Tower[/math][0] = { [math]\aleph_{i}[/math] | [math]i \in \mathbb{N}[/math] } and, again, observed [math]\wp[/math]([math]Tower[/math][0]) = [math]Tower[/math][1] to grasp where it could lead. Without having to come up with a new name, there's [math]Tower[/math][1, 0] = { [math]Tower[/math][[math]i[/math]] | [math]i \in \mathbb{N}[/math] }, indicating a base-[math]\mathbb{N}[/math] positional system.
In general, [math]Tower[/math][[math]1 _{n+1}[/math], [math]0_{n}[/math], . . . , [math]0_{2}[/math], [math]0_{1}[/math]] = { [math]Tower[/math][[math]i_{n}[/math], . . . , [math]i_{2}[/math], [math]i_{1}[/math]] | ([math]i_{n}[/math], . . . , [math]i_{2}[/math], [math]i_{1}[/math]) [math]\in base[/math] [math]\mathbb{N}[/math] }.