This is a question originally asked at MSE a few years ago; the original poster hasn't been active in a while, so I'm taking the liberty of asking it here:
Is there a complete first-order theory $T$ with exactly two countable models up to isomorphism?
If we require $T$ to be countable the answer is negative (Vaught's "Never-Two" theorem). However, the proof of this breaks down completely once we allow $T$ to be uncountable. Various cardinality-mixing results are comparatively easy - e.g. there is a countable theory with exactly two models of cardinality $\aleph_1$ up to isomorphism - but none of them (that I'm aware of anyways) bear on this question.