Critical points in an algebra of elementary embeddings (Q1314541)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    Critical points in an algebra of elementary embeddings
    scientific article

      Statements

      Critical points in an algebra of elementary embeddings (English)
      0 references
      0 references
      4 July 1994
      0 references
      Given two elementary embeddings from the collection of sets of rank less than \(\lambda\) to itself, one can combine them to obtain another such embedding in two ways: by composition, and by applying one to (initial segments of) the other. Hence, a single such nontrivial embedding \(j\) generates an algebra of embeddings via these two operations, which satisfies certain laws (for example, application distributes over both composition and application). Laver has shown, among other things, that this algebra is free on one generator with respect to these laws. The set of critical points of members of this algebra is the subject of this paper. This set contains the critical point \(\kappa_ 0\) of \(j\), as well as all of the other ordinals \(\kappa_ n\) in the critical sequence of \(j\) (defined by \(\kappa_{n+1}= j(\kappa_ n)\)). But the set includes many other ordinals as well. The main result of this paper is that the number of critical points below \(\kappa_ n\) (which has been shown to be finite by Laver and Steel) grows so quickly with \(n\) that it dominates any primitive recursive function. In fact, it grows faster than the Ackermann function, and even faster than a slow iterate of the Ackermann function. It follows that the algebraic consequences of the Laver-Steel result cannot be proved by primitive recursive methods. Further results show that, even just below \(\kappa_ 4\), one can find so many critical points that the number is only expressible using fast- growing hierarchies of iterated functions (six levels of iteration beyond exponentials).
      0 references
      algebra of elementary embeddings
      0 references
      critical points
      0 references
      primitive recursive function
      0 references
      Ackermann function
      0 references
      fast-growing hierarchies of iterated functions
      0 references

      Identifiers