Type theory and realisability
Tuesday December 17, 2024, 10:30AM, Salle 3063
Laura Fontanella (Université Paris-Est Créteil) Ordinals in classical realizability and the axiom of choice
Type theory and realisability
Tuesday December 17, 2024, 11:15AM, Salle 3063
Dominik Kirst (IRIF) Constructive Reverse Mathematics of the Downwards Löwenheim-Skolem Theorem (Joint work with Haoyi Zeng)
The Löwenheim-Skolem (LS) theorem is a central result about first-order logic, entailing that the formalism is incapable of distinguishing different infinite cardinalities. In particular its so-called downward part (DLS), stating that every infinite model can be turned into a countably infinite model with otherwise the exact same behaviour, can be considered surprising or even paradoxical. Therefore the exact assumptions under which the downward Löwenheim-Skolem (DLS) theorem applies have been analysed thoroughly: From the perspective of (classical) reverse mathematics, the DLS theorem is equivalent to the dependent choice axiom (DC), a weak form of the axiom of choice, stating that there is a path through every total relation.
An even more informative answer, taking into account the computational content, can be obtained by the perspective of constructive reverse mathematics. This programme is concerned with the analysis of logical strength over a constructive meta-theory, i.e. in particular without the law of excluded middle (LEM), stating that p ∨ ¬p for all propositions p, and ideally also without countable choice (CC), a consequence of DC. In that setting, finer logical distinctions become visible and thus one can investigate whether (1) the DLS theorem still follows from DC alone, without any contribution of LEM, and (2) whether it still implies the full strength of DC, without any contribution of CC. We show that neither (1) nor (2) is the case by observing that the DLS theorem requires a fragment of LEM, which we call the blurred drinker paradox, and that it implies only a similarly blurred fragment of DC.
Type theory and realisability
Tuesday December 17, 2024, 3PM, Salle 4071
Colin Riba (Ens Lyon) Finitely accessible arboreal adjunctions and Hintikka formulae
Arboreal categories provide an axiomatic framework in which abstract notions
of bisimilarity and back-and-forth games can be defined. They act on
extensional categories, typically consisting of relational structures, via
arboreal adjunctions. In the examples, equivalence of structures in various
fragments of infinitary first-order logic can be captured by transferring
bisimilarity along the adjunction. In most applications, the categories
involved are locally finitely presentable and the adjunctions finitely
accessible. Drawing on this insight, we identify the expressive power of this
class of adjunctions. We show that the ranks of back-and-forth games in the
arboreal category are definable by formulae à la Hintikka. Thus, the relation
between extensional objects induced by bisimilarity is always coarser than
equivalence in infinitary first-order logic. Our approach relies on
Gabriel-Ulmer duality for locally finitely presentable categories, and Hodges’
word-constructions.
Type theory and realisability
Monday December 16, 2024, 1PM, Salle 3063
Alexandre Miquel (Universidad de la República, Uruguay) Implicative algebras: a survey