All Questions
Tagged with computability-theory ordinal-numbers
7 questions
4
votes
2
answers
489
views
Mapping between Notations
$\DeclareMathOperator{\address}{address}$
As in my other question, it is assumed that the (total) function describing a given notation is denoted as $\address:p \rightarrow \Bbb{N}$ and assumed to be ...
17
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Looking for a copy of Leo Harrington's unpublished notes on the first nonprojectible ordinal
Sometime around 1975, Leo Harrington wrote a set of notes, apparently 13 pages long, entitled Kolmogorov's $R$-operator and the first nonprojectible ordinal. I do not know how widely they were ...
16
votes
1
answer
750
views
Is ordinal arithmetic more complicated than classical arithmetic?
Consider the first-order language $\mathcal{L}_{\text{OA}}:=(+,\cdot,0,1)$; in this language, we can formulate statements of ordinal arithmetic. Clearly, the theory $T_{\text{OA}}$ of $(\text{On},+,\...
13
votes
1
answer
650
views
About primitively recursively recognizable ordinals
Preliminary: I believe the notion of primitive recursive functions on ordinals is standard and unproblematic (the main difference with the finite case is that one needs to introduce a $\sup$ or $\...
17
votes
7
answers
2k
views
Finding the largest integer describable with a string of symbols of predefined length
(This question is motivated by the reading of the article Large numbers and unprovable theorems by Joel Spencer, which can be found at http://mathdl.maa.org/images/upload_library/22/Ford/Spencer669-...
12
votes
1
answer
834
views
Transfinitely extending $\sf PA$ — can we get stronger than $\sf ZFC$?
Let $\sf PA$ denote the theory of natural numbers with constants $(0, 1)$ and binary operators $(+,\times)$ based on the first-order predicate calculus with equality, having the following axioms, ...
6
votes
1
answer
571
views
Parameter-free effective cardinals
In the paper "Effective cardinals and determinacy in third order arithmetic" by Juan Aguilera, effective cardinals is defined.
I'm curious about its little variation, parameter-free ...