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True Approximations and Models of Arithmetic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2010

Julia F. Knight
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame
S. Barry Cooper
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
John K. Truss
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
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Summary

Introduction

All structures here have recursive language and recursive universe–we could take the universe to be ω or a finite initial segment. A structure A is identified with its atomic diagram D(A). Thus, the Turing degree of A is the degree of D(A). Non-standard models of PA are among the most self-aware of all mathematical structures, but they do not know that they are nonstandard. This results in some interesting properties, both model-theoretic and recursion-theoretic.

The self-awareness properties are related to the definability of satisfaction, for formulas of bounded complexity, coupled with a coding of definable sets in divisibility types. For an arbitrary structure A, Tn(A)= Th(A)∩Σn is, uniformly in A and n, for n≥1. Thanks to the self-awareness properties, we have Feferman's observation that if A is a non-standard model of PA, then Tn(A)TA for all n.

The fact that a non-standard model of PA does not know that it is non-standard means that we can carry out certain constructions and operations internally (i.e., definably), which would be impossible externally. In particular, we can determine a total function on the model by giving the value at 0 and saying how the value at x+1 is determined from the value at x – never mind that the order type of the model is ω + (ω* + ω)·η.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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