Are there incompatible degrees $D_0, D_1 <_T 0'$ such that for all $X$ if $D_0 \oplus X \equiv_T D_1 \oplus X \equiv_T 0'$ then $X \equiv_T 0'$? So kinda like a cupping analog of a minimal pair.
To put this another way, the Posner-Robinson join theorem gives us that for any $0 <_T A \leq_T 0'$ there is a degree $B <_T 0'$ such that $A \oplus B \equiv_T 0'$. Is there a two degree version of Posner-Robinson, i.e., for any incompatible degrees $D_0, D_1 <_T 0'$ there is a degree $B <_T 0'$ such that $B \oplus D_i \equiv_T 0'$
I suspect that given $n$ incompatible degrees below $0'$ there is a degree below $0'$ joining all of them to $0'$ and that there is some nice simple proof. Let me observe that the two degree version would follow from combining Posner-Robinson with upper cone avoidance.
For, suppose that given $D_0, D_1 <_T 0'$ we can produce a degree $B_0$ via Posner-Robinson joining $D_0$ to $0'$ with $B_0 \ngeq_T D_1$. We could then apply Posner-Robinson again relativized to $B_0$ (as $D_1$ isn't computable in $B_0$) to produce $B >_T B_0$ which joins $D_1$ to $B'_0 \equiv_T 0'$ (as the degree produced by Posner-Robinson is low).