Comparing Classes of Finite Sums
The notion of Turing computable embedding is a computable analog of Borel embedding. It provides a way to compare classes of countable structures, effectively reducing the classification problem for one class to that for the other. Most of the known results on nonexistence of Turing computable embed...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Algebra and logic 2016, Vol.54 (6), p.489-501 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The notion of Turing computable embedding is a computable analog of Borel embedding. It provides a way to compare classes of countable structures, effectively reducing the classification problem for one class to that for the other. Most of the known results on nonexistence of Turing computable embeddings reflect differences in the complexity of the sentences needed to distinguish among nonisomorphic members of the two classes. Here we consider structures obtained as sums. It is shown that the n-fold sums of members of certain classes lie strictly below the
(
n
+1)
-fold sums. The differences reflect model-theoretic considerations related to Morley degree, not differences in the complexity of the sentences that describe the structures. We consider three different kinds of sum structures
:
cardinal sums, in which the components are named by predicates
;
equivalence sums, in which the components are equivalence classes under an equivalence relation
;
and direct sums of certain groups. |
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ISSN: | 0002-5232 1573-8302 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10469-016-9368-7 |