[POSTER]

MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT
SPECIAL HISTORY LECTURE
by
Gerald Sacks*
Professor of Mathematics, Harvard University
Two Approaches to
Vaught's Conjecture

Date and Time: 4:05 - 4:55pm, Monday, Feb. 5
Room: 113 Little Hall
Reception: 5:00-7:00, Little Hall Atrium, Room 339

 

OPENING REMARKS
by
Krishnaswami Alladi
Chair, Department of Mathematics

 

              Sacks PIC

Abstract: Vaught's Conjecture says that a countable theory with uncountably many countable models has a perfect kernel of (hence continuum many) countable models. A result of Hjorth implies that Vaught's Conjecture follows from the construction of certain models of size aleph-two. Two approaches to the construction are morasses and forcing. Absoluteness plays a part in both.


 * Gerald Sacks became Professor of Mathematics at MIT in 1967 and Professor at Harvard in 1972. He has been a world leader in computability theory since his groundbreaking infinite injury priority argument for the density of the recursively enumerable degrees in 1963. He has also a key figure in the study of saturated models and of higher recursion theory. The Sacks Prize of the Association for Symbolic, awarded annually to the best logic Ph.D. dissertation is named in his honor, in recognition of his many outstanding Ph.D. students, including Harvey Friedman (Ohio State), Richard Shore (Cornell), Stephen Simpson (Penn State), Ted Slaman (Berkeley), as well as more than 200 mathematical descendants.

This History Lecture is part of the Special Year in Logic





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Last update made Mon Jan 29 23:12:17 EST 2007.