The Dense Linear Ordering Principle
Pincus, David
J. Symbolic Logic, Tome 62 (1997) no. 1, p. 438-456 / Harvested from Project Euclid
Let DO denote the principle: Every infinite set has a dense linear ordering. DO is compared to other ordering principles such as O, the Linear Ordering principle, KW, the Kinna-Wagner Principle, and PI, the Prime Ideal Theorem, in ZF, Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory without AC, the Axiom of Choice. The main result is: Theorem. $AC \Longrightarrow KW \Longrightarrow DO \Longrightarrow O$, and none of the implications is reversible in ZF + PI. The first and third implications and their irreversibilities were known. The middle one is new. Along the way other results of interest are established. O, while not quite implying DO, does imply that every set differs finitely from a densely ordered set. The independence result for ZF is reduced to one for Fraenkel-Mostowski models by showing that DO falls into two of the known classes of statements automatically transferable from Fraenkel-Mostowski to ZF models. Finally, the proof of PI in the Fraenkel-Mostowski model leads naturally to versions of the Ramsey and Ehrenfeucht-Mostowski theorems involving sets that are both ordered and colored.
Publié le : 1997-06-14
Classification: 
@article{1183745236,
     author = {Pincus, David},
     title = {The Dense Linear Ordering Principle},
     journal = {J. Symbolic Logic},
     volume = {62},
     number = {1},
     year = {1997},
     pages = { 438-456},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1183745236}
}
Pincus, David. The Dense Linear Ordering Principle. J. Symbolic Logic, Tome 62 (1997) no. 1, pp.  438-456. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1183745236/