42,945 research outputs found
Computability and analysis: the legacy of Alan Turing
We discuss the legacy of Alan Turing and his impact on computability and
analysis.Comment: 49 page
On what I do not understand (and have something to say): Part I
This is a non-standard paper, containing some problems in set theory I have
in various degrees been interested in. Sometimes with a discussion on what I
have to say; sometimes, of what makes them interesting to me, sometimes the
problems are presented with a discussion of how I have tried to solve them, and
sometimes with failed tries, anecdote and opinion. So the discussion is quite
personal, in other words, egocentric and somewhat accidental. As we discuss
many problems, history and side references are erratic, usually kept at a
minimum (``see ... '' means: see the references there and possibly the paper
itself).
The base were lectures in Rutgers Fall'97 and reflect my knowledge then. The
other half, concentrating on model theory, will subsequently appear
Open questions about Ramsey-type statements in reverse mathematics
Ramsey's theorem states that for any coloring of the n-element subsets of N
with finitely many colors, there is an infinite set H such that all n-element
subsets of H have the same color. The strength of consequences of Ramsey's
theorem has been extensively studied in reverse mathematics and under various
reducibilities, namely, computable reducibility and uniform reducibility. Our
understanding of the combinatorics of Ramsey's theorem and its consequences has
been greatly improved over the past decades. In this paper, we state some
questions which naturally arose during this study. The inability to answer
those questions reveals some gaps in our understanding of the combinatorics of
Ramsey's theorem.Comment: 15 page
Canonical extensions and ultraproducts of polarities
J{\'o}nsson and Tarski's notion of the perfect extension of a Boolean algebra
with operators has evolved into an extensive theory of canonical extensions of
lattice-based algebras. After reviewing this evolution we make two
contributions. First it is shown that the failure of a variety of algebras to
be closed under canonical extensions is witnessed by a particular one of its
free algebras. The size of the set of generators of this algebra can be made a
function of a collection of varieties and is a kind of Hanf number for
canonical closure. Secondly we study the complete lattice of stable subsets of
a polarity structure, and show that if a class of polarities is closed under
ultraproducts, then its stable set lattices generate a variety that is closed
under canonical extensions. This generalises an earlier result of the author
about generation of canonically closed varieties of Boolean algebras with
operators, which was in turn an abstraction of the result that a first-order
definable class of Kripke frames determines a modal logic that is valid in its
so-called canonical frames
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