In mathematical
set theory, a square principle is a combinatorial principle asserting the existence of a cohering sequence of
short
closed unbounded (club) sets so that no one (long) club set coheres with them all. As such they may be viewed as a kind of
incompactness phenomenon. They were introduced by
Ronald Jensen in his analysis of the fine structure of the
constructible universe L.
Definition
Define Sing to be the
class of all
limit ordinals which are not
regular. ''Global square'' states that there is a system
satisfying:
#
is a
club set
In mathematics, particularly in mathematical logic and set theory, a club set is a subset of a limit ordinal that is closed under the order topology, and is unbounded (see below) relative to the limit ordinal. The name ''club'' is a contraction o ...
of
.
#
ot
# If
is a limit point of
then
and
Variant relative to a cardinal
Jensen introduced also a local version of the principle.
[, p. 443.] If
is an uncountable cardinal,
then
asserts that there is a sequence
satisfying:
#
is a
club set
In mathematics, particularly in mathematical logic and set theory, a club set is a subset of a limit ordinal that is closed under the order topology, and is unbounded (see below) relative to the limit ordinal. The name ''club'' is a contraction o ...
of
.
# If
, then
# If
is a limit point of
then
Jensen proved that this principle holds in the constructible universe for any uncountable cardinal κ.
Notes
*
Set theory
Constructible universe
{{settheory-stub