In mathematics, particularly set theory, non-recursive ordinals are
large countable ordinal
In the mathematical discipline of set theory, there are many ways of describing specific countable set, countable ordinal number, ordinals. The smallest ones can be usefully and non-circularly expressed in terms of their Cantor normal forms. Beyond ...
s greater than all the recursive ordinals, and therefore can not be expressed using
ordinal collapsing function
In mathematical logic and set theory, an ordinal collapsing function (or projection function) is a technique for defining (notations for) certain recursive large countable ordinals, whose principle is to give names to certain ordinals much larger t ...
s.
The Church–Kleene ordinal and variants
The smallest non-recursive ordinal is the Church Kleene ordinal,
, named after
Alonzo Church
Alonzo Church (June 14, 1903 – August 11, 1995) was an American mathematician, computer scientist, logician, philosopher, professor and editor who made major contributions to mathematical logic and the foundations of theoretical computer scie ...
and
S. C. Kleene
Stephen Cole Kleene ( ; January 5, 1909 – January 25, 1994) was an American mathematician. One of the students of Alonzo Church, Kleene, along with Rózsa Péter, Alan Turing, Emil Post, and others, is best known as a founder of the branch of ...
; its
order type
In mathematics, especially in set theory, two ordered sets and are said to have the same order type if they are order isomorphic, that is, if there exists a bijection (each element pairs with exactly one in the other set) f\colon X \to Y such ...
is the set of all
recursive ordinal In mathematics, specifically computability and set theory, an ordinal \alpha is said to be computable or recursive if there is a computable well-ordering of a subset of the natural numbers having the order type \alpha.
It is easy to check that \ ...
s. Since the successor of a recursive ordinal is recursive, the Church–Kleene ordinal is a
limit ordinal
In set theory, a limit ordinal is an ordinal number that is neither zero nor a successor ordinal. Alternatively, an ordinal λ is a limit ordinal if there is an ordinal less than λ, and whenever β is an ordinal less than λ, then there exists ...
. It is also the smallest ordinal that is not
hyperarithmetical, and the smallest
admissible ordinal In set theory, an ordinal number ''α'' is an admissible ordinal if L''α'' is an admissible set (that is, a transitive model of Kripke–Platek set theory); in other words, ''α'' is admissible when ''α'' is a limit ordinal and L''α'' ⊧ � ...
after (an ordinal ''α'' is called admissible if
.). The
-recursive subsets of are exactly the
subsets of .
[D. Madore]
A Zoo of Ordinals
(2017). Accessed September 2021.
The notation
is in reference to , the
first uncountable ordinal
In mathematics, the first uncountable ordinal, traditionally denoted by \omega_1 or sometimes by \Omega, is the smallest ordinal number that, considered as a set, is uncountable. It is the supremum (least upper bound) of all countable ordinals. ...
, which is the set of all countable ordinals, analogously to how the Church-Kleene ordinal is the set of all recursive ordinals.
The relativized Church–Kleene ordinal
is the supremum of the x-computable ordinals.
, first defined by Stephen G. Simpson and dubbed the "Great Church–Kleene ordinal" is an extension of the Church–Kleene ordinal. This is the smallest limit of admissible ordinals, yet this ordinal is not admissible. Alternatively, his is the smallest α such that
is a model of
-comprehension.
Recursively ordinals
Recursively "''x"'' ordinals, where "x" typically represents a
large cardinal
In the mathematical field of set theory, a large cardinal property is a certain kind of property of transfinite cardinal numbers. Cardinals with such properties are, as the name suggests, generally very "large" (for example, bigger than the least ...
property, are kinds of nonrecursive ordinals.
[M. Rathjen]
Proof Theory of Reflection
(1993). Accessed 2022-12-04.
An ordinal
is called ''recursively inaccessible'' if it is admissible and a limit of admissibles (
is the
th admissible ordinal). Alternatively, it is recursively inaccessible if
, an extension of
Kripke–Platek set theory
The Kripke–Platek set theory (KP), pronounced , is an axiomatic set theory developed by Saul Kripke and Richard Platek.
The theory can be thought of as roughly the predicative part of ZFC and is considerably weaker than it.
Axioms
In its fo ...
stating that each set is contained in a model of Kripke–Platek set theory; or, lastly, on the arithmetical side, such that
is a model of
-comprehension.
An ordinal
is called ''recursively hyperinaccessible'' if it is recursively inaccessible and a limit of recursively inaccessibles, or where
is the
th recursively inaccessible. Like "hyper-inaccessible cardinal", different authors conflict on this terminology.
An ordinal
is called ''recursively Mahlo'' if it is admissible and for any
-recursive function
there is an admissible
such that
(that is,
is closed under
). Mirroring the
Mahloness hierarchy,
is ''recursively
-Mahlo'' for an ordinal
if it is admissible and for any
-recursive function
there is an admissible ordinal
such that
is closed under
, and
is recursively
-Mahlo for all
.
An ordinal
is called ''recursively weakly compact'' if it is
-reflecting, or equivalently,
[W. Richter, P. Aczel]
Inductive Definitions and Reflecting Properties of Admissible Ordinals
(1973, p.15). Accessed 2021 October 28. 2-admissible. These ordinals have strong recursive Mahloness properties, if α is
-reflecting then
is recursively
-Mahlo.
Weakenings of stable ordinals
An ordinal
is stable if
. These are some of the largest named nonrecursive ordinals appearing in a model-theoretic context, for instance greater than
for any computably axiomatizable theory
.
Proposition 0.7. There are various weakenings of stable ordinals:
* A countable ordinal
is called
-stable
iff
In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, "if and only if" (shortened as "iff") is a biconditional logical connective between statements, where either both statements are true or both are false.
The connective is bicondi ...
.
** The smallest
-stable ordinal is much larger than the smallest recursively weakly compact ordinal: it has been shown that the smallest
-stable ordinal is
-reflecting for all finite
.
** In general, a countable ordinal
is called
-stable iff
.
* A countable ordinal
is called
-stable iff
, where
is the smallest admissible ordinal
. The smallest
-stable ordinal is again much larger than the smallest
-stable or the smallest
-stable for any constant
.
* A countable ordinal
is called
-stable iff
, where
are the two smallest admissible ordinals
. The smallest
-stable ordinal is larger than the smallest
-reflecting.
* A countable ordinal
is called inaccessibly-stable iff
, where
is the smallest recursively inaccessible ordinal
. The smallest inaccessibly-stable ordinal is larger than the smallest
-stable.
* A countable ordinal
is called Mahlo-stable iff
, where
is the smallest recursively Mahlo ordinal
. The smallest Mahlo-stable ordinal is larger than the smallest inaccessibly-stable.
* A countable ordinal
is called doubly
-stable iff
. The smallest doubly
-stable ordinal is larger than the smallest Mahlo-stable.
Larger nonrecursive ordinals
* The least ordinal
such that
where
is the smallest nonprojectible ordinal.
* An ordinal
is nonprojectible if
is a limit of ''
''-stable ordinals, or; if the set
is unbounded in ''
''.
* The ordinal of ramified analysis, often written as
. This is the smallest
such that
is a model of
second-order comprehension, or
,
without the powerset axiom.
* The least ordinal
such that
. This ordinal has been characterized by Toshiyasu Arai.
[T. Arai]
A Sneak Preview of Proof Theory of Ordinals
(1997, p.17). Accessed 2021 October 28.
* The least ordinal
such that
.
* The least stable ordinal.
References
*
*
*
*
*
*
{{countable ordinals
Proof theory
Ordinal numbers