On a generalization of Jensen's □κ, and strategic closure of partial orders

1983 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 1046-1052 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Velleman

It is well known that many statements provable from combinatorial principles true in the constructible universe L can also be shown to be consistent with ZFC by forcing. Recent work by Shelah and Stanley [4] and the author [5] has clarified the relationship between the axiom of constructibility and forcing by providing Martin's Axiom-type forcing axioms equivalent to ◊ and the existence of morasses. In this paper we continue this line of research by providing a forcing axiom equivalent to □κ. The forcing axiom generalizes easily to inaccessible, non-Mahlo cardinals, and provides the motivation for a corresponding generalization of □κ.In order to state our forcing axiom, we will need to define a strategic closure condition for partial orders. Suppose P = 〈P, ≤〉 is a partial order. For each ordinal α we will consider a game played by two players, Good and Bad. The players choose, in order, the terms in a descending sequence of conditions 〈pβ∣β < α〉 Good chooses all terms pβ for limit β, and Bad chooses all the others. Bad wins if for some limit β<α, Good is unable to move at stage β because 〈pγ∣γ < β〉 has no lower bound. Otherwise, Good wins. Of course, we will be rooting for Good.

1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 1001-1021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Velleman

In a recent series of papers Kanamori ([4], [5], and [6]) defines generalizations of several combinatorial principles known to follow from the existence of morasses. Kanamori proves the consistency of his generalizations by forcing arguments which come close to satisfying the hypotheses of the Martin's Axiom-type characterizations of morasses developed independently by Shelah and Stanley [9] and the author [12]. A similar “almost application” of morasses appears in [11], in which Todorčević uses forcing to prove the consistency of the existence of Kurepa trees with no Aronszajn or Cantor subtrees. In all cases the attempted proofs using morasses fail for the same reason: the partial orders involved do not have strong enough closure properties.In an attempt to solve this problem Shelah and Stanley strengthened their characterization of morasses to allow applications to what they called “good canonical limit” partial orders. However, for rather subtle reasons even this strengthened forcing axiom is not good enough for the proposed applications. The problem this time is that Shelah and Stanley's “weak commutativity of Lim and restriction” requirement (see [9, 3.9(iv)]) is not satisfied. Furthermore, there is reason to believe that an ordinary morass is just not good enough for these applications, since in L morasses exist at all regular uncountable cardinals, but even a weak form of Todorčević's conclusion cannot hold at ineffable cardinals (see the end of §4).A possible solution to this problem is suggested by the fact that □κ is equivalent to a forcing axiom which applies to partial orders satisfying precisely the kind of weak closure conditions involved in the examples described above (see [13]). What is needed to make the proposed morass applications work is something which will do for morass constructions what □κ does for ordinary transfinite recursion constructions. In this paper we show how extra structure can be built into a morass to accomplish this goal.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Xiaoji Liu ◽  
Fang Gui

On the basis of Löwner partial order and core partial order, we introduce a new partial order: LC partial order. By applying matrix decomposition, core inverse, core partial order, and Löwner partial order, we give some characteristics of LC partial order, study the relationship between LC partial order and Löwner partial order under constraint conditions, and illustrate its differences with some classical partial orders, such as minus, CL, and GL partial orders.


Author(s):  
Rainer Forst

This chapter addresses the classical question of the relationship between enlightenment and religion. In doing so, the chapter compares Jürgen Habermas's thought to that of Pierre Bayle and Immanuel Kant. For, although Habermas undoubtedly stands in a tradition founded by Bayle and Kant, he develops a number of important orientations within this tradition and has changed his position in his recent work. The chapter studies this change to understand Habermas's position better. It also draws attention to a fundamental question raised by the modern world: what common ground can human reason establish in the practical and theoretical domain between human beings who are divided by profoundly different religious (including antireligious) views?


Author(s):  
Christopher Hilliard

At this point the chapters catch up in time with the events narrated in the prologue. Chapter 5 begins by recounting George Nicholls’ discoveries in June 1921. The detective searched the Goodings’ and Swans’ houses and took from the Swans’ a quantity of blotting paper that bore the imprint of some of the libels. Rose Gooding’s handwriting was very different. When Sir Archibald Bodkin, the Director of Public Prosecutions, read Nicholls’ report, he declared that this was fundamentally ‘a case of handwriting’. How, Bodkin mused, could an ‘uneducated’ woman develop such a distinctive style? The chapter uses Bodkin’s reaction to Rose Gooding’s letters, the evidence provided by spelling and misspelling, and the inventory of writing paraphernalia in the Gooding and Swan households, to explore the relationship between popular literacy and agency, engaging with the recent work of Jane Caplan and Patrick Joyce.


2014 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
SUREEPORN CHAOPRAKNOI ◽  
TEERAPHONG PHONGPATTANACHAROEN ◽  
PONGSAN PRAKITSRI

AbstractHiggins [‘The Mitsch order on a semigroup’, Semigroup Forum 49 (1994), 261–266] showed that the natural partial orders on a semigroup and its regular subsemigroups coincide. This is why we are interested in the study of the natural partial order on nonregular semigroups. Of particular interest are the nonregular semigroups of linear transformations with lower bounds on the nullity or the co-rank. In this paper, we determine when they exist, characterise the natural partial order on these nonregular semigroups and consider questions of compatibility, minimality and maximality. In addition, we provide many examples associated with our results.


1989 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 167-191
Author(s):  
Eleonore Stump

Recent work on the subject of faith has tended to focus on the epistemology of religious belief, considering such issues as whether beliefs held in faith are rational and how they may be justified. Richard Swinburne, for example, has developed an intricate explanation of the relationship between the propositions of faith and the evidence for them. Alvin Plantinga, on the other hand, has maintained that belief in God may be properly basic, that is, that a belief that God exists can be part of the foundation of a rational noetic structure. This sort of work has been useful in drawing attention to significant issues in the epistemology of religion, but these approaches to faith seem to me also to deepen some long-standing perplexities about traditional Christian views of faith.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 2050011 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Ungor ◽  
S. Halicioglu ◽  
A. Harmanci ◽  
J. Marovt

Let [Formula: see text] be a ring. Motivated by a generalization of a well-known minus partial order to Rickart rings, we introduce a new relation on the power set [Formula: see text] of [Formula: see text] and show that this relation, which we call “the minus order on [Formula: see text]”, is a partial order when [Formula: see text] is a Baer ring. We similarly introduce and study properties of the star, the left-star, and the right-star partial orders on the power sets of Baer ∗-rings. We show that some ideals generated by projections of a von Neumann regular and Baer ∗-ring [Formula: see text] form a lattice with respect to the star partial order on [Formula: see text]. As a particular case, we present characterizations of these orders on the power set of [Formula: see text], the algebra of all bounded linear operators on a Hilbert space [Formula: see text].


Author(s):  
Muhammad Rashad ◽  
Imtiaz Ahmad ◽  
Faruk Karaaslan

A magma S that meets the identity, xy·z = zy·x, ∀x, y, z ∈ S is called an AG-groupoid. An AG-groupoid S gratifying the paramedial law: uv · wx = xv · wu, ∀ u, v, w, x ∈ S is called a paramedial AGgroupoid. Every AG-grouoid with a left identity is paramedial. We extend the concept of inverse AG-groupoid [4, 7] to paramedial AG-groupoid and investigate various of its properties. We prove that inverses of elements in an inverse paramedial AG-groupoid are unique. Further, we initiate and investigate the notions of congruences, partial order and compatible partial orders for inverse paramedial AG-groupoid and strengthen this idea further to a completely inverse paramedial AG-groupoid. Furthermore, we introduce and characterize some congruences on completely inverse paramedial AG-groupoids and introduce and characterize the concept of separative and completely separative ordered, normal sub-groupoid, pseudo normal congruence pair, and normal congruence pair for the class of completely inverse paramedial AG-groupoids. We also provide a variety of examples and counterexamples for justification of the produced results.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 751-755
Author(s):  
Baghdad Science Journal

Most medical books and researches documented that increased body weight is a predisposing factor to hypertension , and there is recent work in this field as well. In this research , the relationships between hypertension and body weight with age were studied in Iraqi population . It is concluded that diastolic hypertension is separated from systolic and combined hypertension and increased body weight has little effect on increased blood pressure.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Daland ◽  
Mira Oh

Loanword corpora have been an important tool in studying the relationship between speech perception and native-language phonotactics. Recent work has challenged this use of loanword corpora on methodological grounds, based on the fact that source and possibly loan orthography conditions the adaptation. The present study replicates and extends this finding by using information theory to quantify the relative strength of orthographic effects, in the adaptation of English vowels into Korean. It is found that the orthographic effect is strong for unstressed vowels, but almost unnoticable for stressed vowels. It is proposed that orthography plays a large role in adaptation only when the source form is perceptually compatible with multiple phonological parses in the borrowing language.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document