Condensation lemma

Lemma in constructibility theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In set theory, a branch of mathematics, the condensation lemma is a result about sets in the constructible universe.

It states that if X is a transitive set and is an elementary submodel of some level of the constructible hierarchy Lα, that is, , then in fact there is some ordinal such that .

More can be said: If X is not transitive, then its transitive collapse is equal to some , and the hypothesis of elementarity can be weakened to elementarity only for formulas which are in the Lévy hierarchy.[1] Also, Devlin showed the assumption that X is transitive automatically holds when .[2]

The lemma was formulated and proved by Kurt Gödel in his proof that the axiom of constructibility implies GCH.

Condensation Arguments

A condensation argument is an argument which uses, in some way, shape, or form, the condensation lemma. Typically, this is done by means of reducing predicates over a specific to predicates over an amenable structure, and then working in that said amenable structure instead of itself.

References

  • Devlin, Keith (1984). Constructibility. Springer. ISBN 3-540-13258-9. (theorem II.5.2 and lemma II.5.10); condensation argument(s)

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