Dissertation, Chalmers (
2004)
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Abstract
Recursive saturation and resplendence are two important notions in models
of arithmetic. Kaye, Kossak, and Kotlarski introduced the notion of
arithmetic saturation and argued that recursive saturation might not be as
rigid as first assumed.
In this thesis we give further examples of variations of recursive saturation,
all of which are connected with expandability properties similar
to resplendence. However, the expandability properties are stronger than
resplendence and implies, in one way or another, that the expansion not
only satisfies a theory, but also omits a type. We conjecture that a special
version of this expandability is in fact equivalent to arithmetic saturation.
We prove that another of these properties is equivalent to -saturation.
We also introduce a variant on recursive saturation which makes sense in
the context of a standard predicate, and which is equivalent to a certain
amount of ordinary saturation.
The theory of all models which omit a certain type p(¯x) is also investigated.
We define a proof system, which proves a sentence if and only if it
is true in all models omitting the type p(¯x). The complexity of such proof
systems are discussed and some explicit examples of theories and types
with high complexity, in a special sense, are given.
We end the thesis by a small comment on Scott’s problem. The problem
is to characterise standard systems of models of arithmetic. We prove that,
under the assumption of Martin’s axiom, every Scott set of cardinality <
2@0 closed under arithmetic comprehension which has the countable chain
condition is the standard system of some model of PA. However, we do not
know if there exists any such uncountable Scott sets.