
Proper and Improper Forcing
Saharon Shelah(Author)
Cambridge University Press
2nd Edition
Published on 23. March 2017
Book
Hardback
1066 pages
978-1-107-16836-7 (ISBN)
Description
Since their inception, the Perspectives in Logic and Lecture Notes in Logic series have published seminal works by leading logicians. Many of the original books in the series have been unavailable for years, but they are now in print once again. This volume, the fifth publication in the Perspectives in Logic series, studies set-theoretic independence results (independence from the usual set-theoretic ZFC axioms), in particular for problems on the continuum. The author gives a complete presentation of the theory of proper forcing and its relatives, starting from the beginning and avoiding the metamathematical considerations. No prior knowledge of forcing is required. The book will enable a researcher interested in an independence result of the appropriate kind to have much of the work done for them, thereby allowing them to quote general results.
More details
Series
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 61 mm
Weight
1687 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-107-16836-7 (9781107168367)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Saharon Shelah
Proper and Improper Forcing
E-Book
03/2017
2nd Edition
Cambridge University Press
€184.99
Available for download
Person
Saharon Shelah works in the Institute of Mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and in the Department of Mathematics at Rutgers University, New Jersey.
Content
Introduction; 1. Forcing, basic facts; 2. Iteration of forcing; 3. Proper forcing; 4. On oracle-c.c., the lifting problem of the measure algebra, and 'P(w)/finite has no trivial automorphism'; 5. ?-properness and not adding reals; 6. Preservation of additional properties, and applications; 7. Axioms and their application; 8. ?-pic and not adding reals; 9. Souslin hypothesis does not imply 'every Aronszajn tree is special'; 10. On semi-proper forcing; 11. Changing confinalities; equi-consistency results; 12. Improper forcing; 13. Large ideals on w1; 14. Iterated forcing with uncountable support; 15. A more general iterable condition ensuring ?1 is not collapsed; 16. Large ideals on ?1 from smaller cardinals; 17. Forcing axioms; 18. More on proper forcing; Appendix. On weak diamonds and the power of ext; References; More references.