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Cardinal Arithmetic
Contributor(s): Shelah, Saharon (Author)
ISBN: 0198537859     ISBN-13: 9780198537854
Publisher: Clarendon Press
OUR PRICE:   $299.25  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: December 1994
Qty:
Annotation: Is the continuum hypothesis still open? If we interpret it as finding the laws of cardinal arithmetic (or exponentiation, since addition and multiplication were classically solved), the hypothesis would be solved by the independence results of Godel, Cohen, and Easton, with some isolated
positive results (like Gavin-Hajnal). Most mathematicians expect that only more independence results remain to be proved. In Cardinal Arithmetic, however, Saharon Shelah offers an alternative view. By redefining the hypothesis, he gets new results for the conventional cardinal arithmetic, finds
new applications, extends older methods using normal filters, and proves the existence of Jonsson algebra. Researchers in set theory and related areas of mathematical logic will want to read this provocative new approach to an important topic.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Mathematics | Set Theory
- Mathematics | Arithmetic
- Mathematics | Logic
Dewey: 511.322
LCCN: 94033247
Physical Information: 1.41" H x 6.58" W x 9.48" (2.04 lbs) 512 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Is the continuum hypothesis still open? If we interpret it as finding the laws of cardinal arithmetic (or exponentiation, since addition and multiplication were classically solved), the hypothesis would be solved by the independence results of Gödel, Cohen, and Easton, with some isolated
positive results (like Gavin-Hajnal). Most mathematicians expect that only more independence results remain to be proved. In Cardinal Arithmetic, however, Saharon Shelah offers an alternative view. By redefining the hypothesis, he gets new results for the conventional cardinal arithmetic, finds
new applications, extends older methods using normal filters, and proves the existence of Jonsson algebra. Researchers in set theory and related areas of mathematical logic will want to read this provocative new approach to an important topic.