After Godel's groundbreaking results, a plethora of $\Pi_1^0$ undecidable arithmetical sentences have been found by many authors.
But what about $\Pi_n^0$ for $n=2,3,.....$ ?
There are, to my knowledge (but I am no expert) a few examples on the low end of the ladder, for instance Svejdar, a student of Petr Hajek, in the early eighties initiated the study of interpretability logic, and in the process identified one such sentence.
Now, my question:
Is there some systematic procedure/strategy for building a list of progressively higher (in the sense of the arithmetical hierarchy) undecidable sentences?
NOTE: I would think that one option could be to follow Svejdar's steps, and identify sentences which express higher (and/or looser) forms of auto-referentiality.
ADDENDUM: As Joel Hamkins has immediately pointed out in the comment below, the question, as formulated above, is entirely trivial (you simply join a pi_0 godelian sentence with a known to be true pi_n sentence and the game is over). I guess it should be emended by ruling out such cases, and stipulating that the rungs of the ladder should be $\Pi_0^n$ sentences which are undecomposable, meaning that they cannot be boolean-broken in smaller pieces where a $\Pi_0^k$ with k less than n undecidable is found. The idea is that the new rung should express a genuine new (higher) form of undecidability.
$\Pi^0_n$
sentence that is not provably equivalent to a$\Sigma^0_n$
sentence (and therefore not provably equivalent to any sentence at any lower level of the arithmetical hierarchy). Maybe he also wants it to not be too explicitly about computability, but it's not clear where the boundary of "too explicitly" would be. $\endgroup$