05166nam 2200709 450 991045361110332120200903223051.0981-4571-58-X(CKB)2550000001191485(EBL)1611985(SSID)ssj0001112794(PQKBManifestationID)12499137(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001112794(PQKBWorkID)11161399(PQKB)10815430(MiAaPQ)EBC1611985(WSP)00009013(PPN)189428686(Au-PeEL)EBL1611985(CaPaEBR)ebr10832710(CaONFJC)MIL570908(OCoLC)869522979(EXLCZ)99255000000119148520131025h20142014 uy| 0engurbuu|||uu|||txtccrNotes on forcing axioms /Stevo Todorcevic, University of Toronto, Canada ; edited by Chitat Chong, National University of Singapore, Singapore [and four others]New Jersey :World Scientific,[2014]©20141 online resource (234 p.)Lecture notes series (Institute for Mathematical Sciences, National University of Singapore),1793-0758 ;volume 26Description based upon print version of record.981-4571-57-1 1-306-39657-3 Includes bibliographical references.Contents; Foreword by Series Editors; Foreword by Volume Editors; Preface; 1 Baire Category Theorem and the Baire Category Numbers; 1.1 The Baire category method - a classical example; 1.2 Baire category numbers; 1.3 P-clubs; 1.4 Baire category numbers of posets; 1.5 Proper and semi-proper posets; 2 Coding Sets by the Real Numbers; 2.1 Almost-disjoint coding; 2.2 Coding families of unordered pairs of ordinals; 2.3 Coding sets of ordered pairs; 2.4 Strong coding; 2.5 Solovay's lemma and its corollaries; 3 Consequences in Descriptive Set Theory; 3.1 Borel isomorphisms between Polish spaces3.2 Analytic and co-analytic sets 3.3 Analytic and co-analytic sets under p > ω1; 4 Consequences in Measure Theory; 4.1 Measure spaces; 4.2 More on measure spaces; 5 Variations on the Souslin Hypothesis; 5.1 The countable chain condition; 5.2 The Souslin Hypothesis; 5.3 A selective ultrafilter from m > ω1; 5.4 The countable chain condition versus the separability; 6 The S-spaces and the L-spaces; 6.1 Hereditarily separable and hereditarily Lindelof spaces; 6.2 Countable tightness and the S- and L-space problems; 7 The Side-condition Method; 7.1 Elementary submodels as side conditions7.2 Open graph axiom 8 Ideal Dichotomies; 8.1 Small ideal dichotomy; 8.2 Sparse set-mapping principle; 8.3 P-ideal dichotomy; 9 Coherent and Lipschitz Trees; 9.1 The Lipschitz condition; 9.2 Filters and trees; 9.3 Model rejecting a finite set of nodes; 9.4 Coloring axiom for coherent trees; 10 Applications to the S-space Problem and the von Neumann Problem; 10.1 The S-space problem and its relatives; 10.2 The P-ideal dichotomy and a problem of von Neumann; 11 Biorthogonal Systems; 11.1 The quotient problem; 11.2 A topological property of the dual ball; 11.3 A problem of Rolewicz16 Cardinal Arithmetic and mm 16.1 mm and the continuum; 16.2 mm and cardinal arithmetic above the continuum; 17 Reflection Principles; 17.1 Strong reflection of stationary sets; 17.2 Weak reflection of stationary sets; 17.3 Open stationary set-mapping reflection; Appendix A Basic Notions; A.1 Set theoretic notions; A.2 Δ-systems and free sets; A.3 Topological notions; A.4 Boolean algebras; Appendix B Preserving Stationary Sets; B.1 Stationary sets; B.2 Partial orders, Boolean algebras and topological spaces; B.3 A topological translation of stationary set preservingAppendix C Historical and Other CommentsIn the mathematical practice, the Baire category method is a tool for establishing the existence of a rich array of generic structures. However, in mathematics, the Baire category method is also behind a number of fundamental results such as the Open Mapping Theorem or the Banach-Steinhaus Boundedness Principle. This volume brings the Baire category method to another level of sophistication via the internal version of the set-theoretic forcing technique. It is the first systematic account of applications of the higher forcing axioms with the stress on the technique of building forcing notionsLecture notes series (National University of Singapore. Institute for Mathematical Sciences) ;v. 26.Forcing (Model theory)AxiomsBaire classesElectronic books.Forcing (Model theory)Axioms.Baire classes.511.3Todorcevic Stevo61532Chong C.-T(Chi-Tat),1949-441174MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910453611103321Notes on forcing axioms1918977UNINA