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During the past 25 years, set theory has developed in several
interesting directions. The most outstanding results cover the
application of sophisticated techniques to problems in analysis,
topology, infinitary combinatorics and other areas of mathematics.
This book contains a selection of contributions, some of which are
expository in nature, embracing various aspects of the latest
developments. Amongst topics treated are forcing axioms and their
applications, combinatorial principles used to construct models,
and a variety of other set theoretical tools including inner
models, partitions and trees. Audience: This book will be of
interest to graduate students and researchers in foundational
problems of mathematics.
During the past 25 years, set theory has developed in several
interesting directions. The most outstanding results cover the
application of sophisticated techniques to problems in analysis,
topology, infinitary combinatorics and other areas of mathematics.
This book contains a selection of contributions, some of which are
expository in nature, embracing various aspects of the latest
developments. Amongst topics treated are forcing axioms and their
applications, combinatorial principles used to construct models,
and a variety of other set theoretical tools including inner
models, partitions and trees. Audience: This book will be of
interest to graduate students and researchers in foundational
problems of mathematics.
This book comprises five expository articles and two research
papers on topics of current interest in set theory and the
foundations of mathematics. Articles by Baumgartner and Devlin
introduce the reader to proper forcing. This is a development by
Saharon Shelah of Cohen's method which has led to solutions of
problems that resisted attack by forcing methods as originally
developed in the 1960s. The article by Guaspari is an introduction
to descriptive set theory, a subject that has developed
dramatically in the last few years. Articles by Kanamori and
Stanley discuss one of the most difficult concepts in contemporary
set theory, that of the morass, first created by Ronald Jensen in
1971 to solve the gap-two conjecture in model theory, assuming
Goedel's axiom of constructibility. The papers by Prikry and Shelah
complete the volume by giving the reader the flavour of
contemporary research in set theory. This book will be of interest
to graduate students and research workers in set theory and
mathematical logic.
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