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The proceedings of the Los Angeles Caltech-UCLA 'Cabal Seminar'
were originally published in the 1970s and 1980s. Large Cardinals,
Determinacy and Other Topics is the final volume in a series of
four books collecting the seminal papers from the original volumes
together with extensive unpublished material, new papers on related
topics and discussion of research developments since the
publication of the original volumes. This final volume contains
Parts VII and VIII of the series. Part VII focuses on 'Extensions
of AD, models with choice', while Part VIII ('Other topics')
collects material important to the Cabal that does not fit neatly
into one of its main themes. These four volumes will be a necessary
part of the book collection of every set theorist.
The proceedings of the Los Angeles Caltech-UCLA 'Cabal Seminar'
were originally published in the 1970s and 1980s. Ordinal
Definability and Recursion Theory is the third in a series of four
books collecting the seminal papers from the original volumes
together with extensive unpublished material, new papers on related
topics and discussion of research developments since the
publication of the original volumes. Focusing on the subjects of
'HOD and its Local Versions' (Part V) and 'Recursion Theory' (Part
VI), each of the two sections is preceded by an introductory survey
putting the papers into present context. These four volumes will be
a necessary part of the book collection of every set theorist.
The proceedings of the Los Angeles Caltech-UCLA 'Cabal Seminar'
were originally published in the 1970s and 1980s. Wadge Degrees and
Projective Ordinals is the second of a series of four books
collecting the seminal papers from the original volumes together
with extensive unpublished material, new papers on related topics
and discussion of research developments since the publication of
the original volumes. Focusing on the subjects of 'Wadge Degrees
and Pointclasses' (Part III) and 'Projective Ordinals' (Part IV),
each of the two sections is preceded by an introductory survey
putting the papers into present context. These four volumes will be
a necessary part of the book collection of every set theorist.
The proceedings of the Los Angeles Caltech-UCLA 'Cabal Seminar'
were originally published in the 1970s and 1980s. Games, Scales,
and Suslin Cardinals is the first of a series of four books
collecting the seminal papers from the original volumes together
with extensive unpublished material, new papers on related topics,
and discussion of research developments since the publication of
the original volumes. Focusing on the subjects of 'Games and
Scales' (Part 1) and 'Suslin Cardinals, Partition Properties, and
Homogeneity' (Part 2), each of the two sections is preceded by an
introductory survey putting the papers into present context. This
volume will be an invaluable reference for anyone interested in
higher set theory.
In this book the authors present their research into the
foundations of the theory of Polish groups and the associated orbit
equivalence relations. The particular case of locally compact
groups has long been studied in many areas of mathematics.
Non-locally compact Polish groups occur naturally as groups of
symmetries in such areas as logic (especially model theory),
ergodic theory, group representations, and operator algebras. Some
of the topics covered here are: topological realizations of Borel
measurable actions; universal actions; applications to invariant
measures; actions of the infinite symmetric group in connection
with model theory (logic actions); dichotomies for orbit spaces
(including Silver, Glimm-Effros type dichotomies and the
topological Vaught conjecture); descriptive complexity of orbit
equivalence relations; definable cardinality of orbit spaces.
The authors present some surprising connections that sets of uniqueness for trigonometic series have with descriptive set theory. They present many new results concerning the structure of sets of uniqueness and include solutions to some of the classical problems in this area. Topics covered include symmetric perfect sets and the solution to the Borel Basis Problem for U, the class of sets of uniqueness. To make the material accessible to both logicians, set theorists and analysts, the authors have covered in some detail large parts of the classical and modern theory of sets of uniqueness as well as the relevant parts of descriptive set theory. Because the book is essentially selfcontained and requires the minimum prerequisites, it will serve as an excellent introduction to the subject for graduate students and research workers in set theory and analysis.
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Analysis and Logic (Paperback)
C. Ward Henson, Jose Iovino, Alexander S. Kechris, Edward Odell; Edited by Catherine Finet, …
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R1,788
Discovery Miles 17 880
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume presents articles from four outstanding researchers who work at the cusp of analysis and logic. The emphasis is on active research topics; many results are presented that have not been published before and open problems are formulated. Considerable effort has been made by the authors to make their articles accessible to mathematicians new to the area
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