Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Historical remarks on Suslin's problem
- The continuum hypothesis, the generic-multiverse of sets, and the Ω conjecture
- ω-models of finite set theory
- Tennenbaum's theorem for models of arithmetic
- Hierarchies of subsystems of weak arithmetic
- Diophantine correct open induction
- Tennenbaum's theorem and recursive reducts
- History of constructivism in the 20th century
- A very short history of ultrafinitism
- Sue Toledo's notes of her conversations with Gödel in 1972–5
- Stanley Tennenbaum's Socrates
- Tennenbaum's proof of the irrationality of √2
- References
Tennenbaum's theorem for models of arithmetic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Historical remarks on Suslin's problem
- The continuum hypothesis, the generic-multiverse of sets, and the Ω conjecture
- ω-models of finite set theory
- Tennenbaum's theorem for models of arithmetic
- Hierarchies of subsystems of weak arithmetic
- Diophantine correct open induction
- Tennenbaum's theorem and recursive reducts
- History of constructivism in the 20th century
- A very short history of ultrafinitism
- Sue Toledo's notes of her conversations with Gödel in 1972–5
- Stanley Tennenbaum's Socrates
- Tennenbaum's proof of the irrationality of √2
- References
Summary
Abstract. This paper discusses Tennenbaum's Theorem in its original context of models of arithmetic, which states that there are no recursive nonstandard models of Peano Arithmetic. We focus on three separate areas: the historical background to the theorem; an understanding of the theorem and its relationship with the Gödel–Rosser Theorem; and extensions of Tennenbaum's theorem to diophantine problems in models of arthmetic, especially problems concerning which diophantine equations have roots in some model of a given theory of arithmetic.
§ 1.Some historical background. The theorem known as “Tennenbaum's Theorem” was given by Stanley Tennenbaum in a paper at the April meeting in Monterey, California, 1959, and published as a one-page abstract in the Notices of the American Mathematical Society [28]. It is easily stated as saying that there is no nonstandard recursive model of Peano Arithmetic, and is an attractive and rightly often-quoted result.
This paper celebrates Tennenbaum's Theorem; we state the result fully and give a proof of it andother related results later. This introduction is in the main historical. The goals of the latter parts of this paper are: to set out the connections between Tennenbaum's Theorem for models of arithmetic and the Gödel–Rosser Theorem and recursively inseparable sets; and to investigate stronger versions of Tennenbaum's Theorem and their relationship to some diophantine problems in systems of arithmetic.
Tennenbaum's theorem was discovered in a period of foundational studies, associated particularly with Mostowski, where it still seemed conceivable that useful independence results for arithmetic could be achieved by a “handson” approach to building nonstandard models of arithmetic.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Set Theory, Arithmetic, and Foundations of MathematicsTheorems, Philosophies, pp. 66 - 79Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
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