Recursively Enumerable Sets and Degrees

Recursively Enumerable Sets and Degrees
Author: Robert I. Soare
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 460
Release: 1999-11-01
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9783540152996

..."The book, written by one of the main researchers on the field, gives a complete account of the theory of r.e. degrees. .... The definitions, results and proofs are always clearly motivated and explained before the formal presentation; the proofs are described with remarkable clarity and conciseness. The book is highly recommended to everyone interested in logic. It also provides a useful background to computer scientists, in particular to theoretical computer scientists." Acta Scientiarum Mathematicarum, Ungarn 1988 ..."The main purpose of this book is to introduce the reader to the main results and to the intricacies of the current theory for the recurseively enumerable sets and degrees. The author has managed to give a coherent exposition of a rather complex and messy area of logic, and with this book degree-theory is far more accessible to students and logicians in other fields than it used to be." Zentralblatt für Mathematik, 623.1988

Automorphisms of the Lattice of Recursively Enumerable Sets

Automorphisms of the Lattice of Recursively Enumerable Sets
Author: Peter Cholak
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 166
Release: 1995
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821826018

A version of Harrington's [capital Greek]Delta3-automorphism technique for the lattice of recursively enumerable sets is introduced and developed by reproving Soare's Extension Theorem. Then this automorphism technique is used to show two technical theorems: the High Extension Theorem I and the High Extension Theorem II. This is a degree-theoretic technique for constructing both automorphisms of the lattice of r.e. sets and isomorphisms between various substructures of the lattice.

The Role of True Finiteness in the Admissible Recursively Enumerable Degrees

The Role of True Finiteness in the Admissible Recursively Enumerable Degrees
Author: Noam Greenberg
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 114
Release: 2006
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821838857

When attempting to generalize recursion theory to admissible ordinals, it may seem as if all classical priority constructions can be lifted to any admissible ordinal satisfying a sufficiently strong fragment of the replacement scheme. We show, however, that this is not always the case. In fact, there are some constructions which make an essential use of the notion of finiteness which cannot be replaced by the generalized notion of $\alpha$-finiteness. As examples we discuss bothcodings of models of arithmetic into the recursively enumerable degrees, and non-distributive lattice embeddings into these degrees. We show that if an admissible ordinal $\alpha$ is effectively close to $\omega$ (where this closeness can be measured by size or by cofinality) then such constructions maybe performed in the $\alpha$-r.e. degrees, but otherwise they fail. The results of these constructions can be expressed in the first-order language of partially ordered sets, and so these results also show that there are natu