342 research outputs found
Finitary reducibility on equivalence relations
We introduce the notion of finitary computable reducibility on equivalence
relations on the natural numbers. This is a weakening of the usual notion of
computable reducibility, and we show it to be distinct in several ways. In
particular, whereas no equivalence relation can be -complete under
computable reducibility, we show that, for every , there does exist a
natural equivalence relation which is -complete under finitary
reducibility. We also show that our hierarchy of finitary reducibilities does
not collapse, and illustrate how it sharpens certain known results. Along the
way, we present several new results which use computable reducibility to
establish the complexity of various naturally defined equivalence relations in
the arithmetical hierarchy
Survey on the Tukey theory of ultrafilters
This article surveys results regarding the Tukey theory of ultrafilters on
countable base sets. The driving forces for this investigation are Isbell's
Problem and the question of how closely related the Rudin-Keisler and Tukey
reducibilities are. We review work on the possible structures of cofinal types
and conditions which guarantee that an ultrafilter is below the Tukey maximum.
The known canonical forms for cofinal maps on ultrafilters are reviewed, as
well as their applications to finding which structures embed into the Tukey
types of ultrafilters. With the addition of some Ramsey theory, fine analyses
of the structures at the bottom of the Tukey hierarchy are made.Comment: 25 page
Computational reverse mathematics and foundational analysis
Reverse mathematics studies which subsystems of second order arithmetic are
equivalent to key theorems of ordinary, non-set-theoretic mathematics. The main
philosophical application of reverse mathematics proposed thus far is
foundational analysis, which explores the limits of different foundations for
mathematics in a formally precise manner. This paper gives a detailed account
of the motivations and methodology of foundational analysis, which have
heretofore been largely left implicit in the practice. It then shows how this
account can be fruitfully applied in the evaluation of major foundational
approaches by a careful examination of two case studies: a partial realization
of Hilbert's program due to Simpson [1988], and predicativism in the extended
form due to Feferman and Sch\"{u}tte.
Shore [2010, 2013] proposes that equivalences in reverse mathematics be
proved in the same way as inequivalences, namely by considering only
-models of the systems in question. Shore refers to this approach as
computational reverse mathematics. This paper shows that despite some
attractive features, computational reverse mathematics is inappropriate for
foundational analysis, for two major reasons. Firstly, the computable
entailment relation employed in computational reverse mathematics does not
preserve justification for the foundational programs above. Secondly,
computable entailment is a complete relation, and hence employing it
commits one to theoretical resources which outstrip those available within any
foundational approach that is proof-theoretically weaker than
.Comment: Submitted. 41 page
Complexity of equivalence relations and preorders from computability theory
We study the relative complexity of equivalence relations and preorders from
computability theory and complexity theory. Given binary relations , a
componentwise reducibility is defined by R\le S \iff \ex f \, \forall x, y \,
[xRy \lra f(x) Sf(y)]. Here is taken from a suitable class of effective
functions. For us the relations will be on natural numbers, and must be
computable. We show that there is a -complete equivalence relation, but
no -complete for .
We show that preorders arising naturally in the above-mentioned
areas are -complete. This includes polynomial time -reducibility
on exponential time sets, which is , almost inclusion on r.e.\ sets,
which is , and Turing reducibility on r.e.\ sets, which is .Comment: To appear in J. Symb. Logi
On Berry's conjectures about the stable order in PCF
PCF is a sequential simply typed lambda calculus language. There is a unique
order-extensional fully abstract cpo model of PCF, built up from equivalence
classes of terms. In 1979, G\'erard Berry defined the stable order in this
model and proved that the extensional and the stable order together form a
bicpo. He made the following two conjectures: 1) "Extensional and stable order
form not only a bicpo, but a bidomain." We refute this conjecture by showing
that the stable order is not bounded complete, already for finitary PCF of
second-order types. 2) "The stable order of the model has the syntactic order
as its image: If a is less than b in the stable order of the model, for finite
a and b, then there are normal form terms A and B with the semantics a, resp.
b, such that A is less than B in the syntactic order." We give counter-examples
to this conjecture, again in finitary PCF of second-order types, and also
refute an improved conjecture: There seems to be no simple syntactic
characterization of the stable order. But we show that Berry's conjecture is
true for unary PCF. For the preliminaries, we explain the basic fully abstract
semantics of PCF in the general setting of (not-necessarily complete) partial
order models (f-models.) And we restrict the syntax to "game terms", with a
graphical representation.Comment: submitted to LMCS, 39 pages, 23 pstricks/pst-tree figures, main
changes for this version: 4.1: proof of game term theorem corrected, 7.: the
improved chain conjecture is made precise, more references adde
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