29 research outputs found
Cohesive avoidance and arithmetical sets
An open question in reverse mathematics is whether the cohesive principle,
\COH, is implied by the stable form of Ramsey's theorem for pairs,
\SRT^2_2, in -models of \RCA. One typical way of establishing this
implication would be to show that for every sequence of subsets of
, there is a set that is in such that every
infinite subset of or computes an -cohesive set. In this
article, this is shown to be false, even under far less stringent assumptions:
for all natural numbers and , there is a sequence \vec{R}
= \sequence{R_0,...,R_{n-1}} of subsets of such that for any
partition of arithmetical in , there is an
infinite subset of some that computes no set cohesive for . This
complements a number of previous results in computability theory on the
computational feebleness of infinite sets of numbers with prescribed
combinatorial properties. The proof is a forcing argument using an adaptation
of the method of Seetapun showing that every finite coloring of pairs of
integers has an infinite homogeneous set not computing a given non-computable
set
Reverse mathematics and properties of finite character
We study the reverse mathematics of the principle stating that, for every
property of finite character, every set has a maximal subset satisfying the
property. In the context of set theory, this variant of Tukey's lemma is
equivalent to the axiom of choice. We study its behavior in the context of
second-order arithmetic, where it applies to sets of natural numbers only, and
give a full characterization of its strength in terms of the quantifier
structure of the formula defining the property. We then study the interaction
between properties of finite character and finitary closure operators, and the
interaction between these properties and a class of nondeterministic closure
operators.Comment: This paper corresponds to section 4 of arXiv:1009.3242, "Reverse
mathematics and equivalents of the axiom of choice", which has been
abbreviated and divided into two pieces for publicatio
Reverse mathematics and equivalents of the axiom of choice
We study the reverse mathematics of countable analogues of several maximality
principles that are equivalent to the axiom of choice in set theory. Among
these are the principle asserting that every family of sets has a
-maximal subfamily with the finite intersection property and the
principle asserting that if is a property of finite character then every
set has a -maximal subset of which holds. We show that these
principles and their variations have a wide range of strengths in the context
of second-order arithmetic, from being equivalent to to being
weaker than and incomparable with . In
particular, we identify a choice principle that, modulo induction,
lies strictly below the atomic model theorem principle and
implies the omitting partial types principle