Buch, Englisch, 456 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 820 g
Buch, Englisch, 456 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 820 g
ISBN: 978-0-444-50542-2
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Technology
Another important problem is the extension to posets of classical properties of chains. For instance one easily sees that a chain A is scattered if the chain of inclusion of its initial intervals is itself scattered (6.1.4). Let us again define a scattered poset A by the non-embedding of Q in A. We say that A is finitely free if every antichain restriction of A is finite (antichain = set of mutually incomparable elements of the base). In 1969 Bonnet and Pouzet proved that a poset A is finitely free and scattered iff the ordering of inclusion of initial intervals of A is scattered. In 1981 Pouzet proved the equivalence with the a priori stronger condition that A is topologically scattered: (see 6.7.4; a more general result is due to Mislove 1984); ie: every non-empty set of initial intervals contains an isolated elements for the simple convergence topology.
In chapter 9 we begin the general theory of relations, with the notions of local isomorphism, free interpretability and free operator (9.1 to 9.3), which is the relationist version of a free logical formula. This is generalized by the back-and-forth notions in 10.10: the (k,p)-operator is the relationist version of the elementary formula (first order formula with equality).
Chapter 12 connects relation theory with permutations: theorem of the increasing number of orbits (Livingstone, Wagner in 12.4). Also in this chapter homogeneity is introduced, then more deeply studied in the Appendix written by Norbert Saucer.
Chapter 13 connects relation theory with finite permutation groups; the main notions and results are due to Frasnay. Also mention the extension to relations of adjacent elements, by Hodges, Lachlan, Shelah who by this mean give an exact calculus of the reduction threshold.
The book covers almost all present knowledge in Relation Theory, from origins (Hausdorff 1914, Sierpinski 1928) to classical results (Frasnay 1965, Laver 1968, Pouzet 1981) until recent important publications (Abraham, Bonnet 1999).
All results are exposed in axiomatic set theory. This allows us, for each statement, to specify if it is proved only from ZF axioms of choice, the continuum hypothesis or only the ultrafilter axiom or the axiom of dependent choice, for instance.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction. 1. Review of axiomatic set theory, relation. 2. Coherence lemma, cofinality, tree, ideal. 3. Ramsey theorem, partition, incidence matrix. 4. Good, bad sequence, well partial ordering. 5. Embeddability between relations and chains. 6. Scattered chain, scattered poset. 7. Well quasi-ordering of scattered chains. 8. Bivalent tableau, Szpilrajn chain. 9. Free operator, chainability, strong interval. 10. Age, &agr;-morphism, back-and-forth. 11. Relative isomorphism, saturated relation. 12. Homogeneous relation, orbit. 13. Compatibility and chainability theorems. A. On countable homogeneous systems: Sauer