University of California, Berkeley
Mathematics
PhD, 1994
CV
Oxford, England, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  424
    Infinite time Turing machines
    with Andy Lewis
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 65 (2): 567-604. 2000.
    Infinite time Turing machines extend the operation of ordinary Turing machines into transfinite ordinal time. By doing so, they provide a natural model of infinitary computability, a theoretical setting for the analysis of the power and limitations of supertask algorithms.
  •  116
    Destruction or preservation as you like it
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 91 (2-3): 191-229. 1998.
    The Gap Forcing Theorem, a key contribution of this paper, implies essentially that after any reverse Easton iteration of closed forcing, such as the Laver preparation, every supercompactness measure on a supercompact cardinal extends a measure from the ground model. Thus, such forcing can create no new supercompact cardinals, and, if the GCH holds, neither can it increase the degree of supercompactness of any cardinal; in particular, it can create no new measurable cardinals. In a crescendo of …Read more
  •  120
    Set-theoretic geology
    with Gunter Fuchs and Jonas Reitz
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 166 (4): 464-501. 2015.
  •  247
    Utilitarianism in Infinite Worlds
    Utilitas 12 (1): 91. 2000.
    Recently in the philosophical literature there has been some effort made to understand the proper application of the theory of utilitarianism to worlds in which there are infinitely many bearers of utility. Here, we point out that one of the best, most inclusive principles proposed to date contradicts fundamental utilitarian ideas, such as the idea that adding more utility makes a better world
  •  142
    Superstrong and other large cardinals are never Laver indestructible
    with Joan Bagaria, Konstantinos Tsaprounis, and Toshimichi Usuba
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 55 (1-2): 19-35. 2016.
    Superstrong cardinals are never Laver indestructible. Similarly, almost huge cardinals, huge cardinals, superhuge cardinals, rank-into-rank cardinals, extendible cardinals, 1-extendible cardinals, 0-extendible cardinals, weakly superstrong cardinals, uplifting cardinals, pseudo-uplifting cardinals, superstrongly unfoldable cardinals, Σn-reflecting cardinals, Σn-correct cardinals and Σn-extendible cardinals are never Laver indestructible. In fact, all these large cardinal properties are superdest…Read more
  •  136
    The lottery preparation
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 101 (2-3): 103-146. 2000.
    The lottery preparation, a new general kind of Laver preparation, works uniformly with supercompact cardinals, strongly compact cardinals, strong cardinals, measurable cardinals, or what have you. And like the Laver preparation, the lottery preparation makes these cardinals indestructible by various kinds of further forcing. A supercompact cardinal κ, for example, becomes fully indestructible by
  •  155
    P^f NP^f for almost all f
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 49 (5): 536. 2003.
    We discuss the question of Ralf-Dieter Schindler whether for infinite time Turing machines Pf = NPf can be true for any function f from the reals into ω1. We show that “almost everywhere” the answer is negative
  •  163
    Generalizations of the Kunen inconsistency
    with Greg Kirmayer and Norman Lewis Perlmutter
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 163 (12): 1872-1890. 2012.
    We present several generalizations of the well-known Kunen inconsistency that there is no nontrivial elementary embedding from the set-theoretic universe V to itself. For example, there is no elementary embedding from the universe V to a set-forcing extension V[G], or conversely from V[G] to V, or more generally from one set-forcing ground model of the universe to another, or between any two models that are eventually stationary correct, or from V to HOD, or conversely from HOD to V, or indeed f…Read more
  •  239
    A simple maximality principle
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 68 (2): 527-550. 2003.
    In this paper, following an idea of Christophe Chalons. I propose a new kind of forcing axiom, the Maximality Principle, which asserts that any sentence varphi holding in some forcing extension $V^P$ and all subsequent extensions $V^{P\ast Q}$ holds already in V. It follows, in fact, that such sentences must also hold in all forcing extensions of V. In modal terms, therefore, the Maximality Principle is expressed by the scheme $(\lozenge \square \varphi) \Rightarrow \square \varphi$ , and is equ…Read more
  •  168
    Diamond (on the regulars) can fail at any strongly unfoldable cardinal
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 144 (1-3): 83-95. 2006.
    If κ is any strongly unfoldable cardinal, then this is preserved in a forcing extension in which κ fails. This result continues the progression of the corresponding results for weakly compact cardinals, due to Woodin, and for indescribable cardinals, due to Hauser.
  •  186
    Unfoldable cardinals and the GCH
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 66 (3): 1186-1198. 2001.
    Unfoldable cardinals are preserved by fast function forcing and the Laver-like preparations that fast functions support. These iterations show, by set-forcing over any model of ZFC, that any given unfoldable cardinal κ can be made indestructible by the forcing to add any number of Cohen subsets to κ
  •  175
    Superdestructibility: A Dual to Laver's Indestructibility
    with Saharon Shelah
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 63 (2): 549-554. 1998.
    After small forcing, any $ -closed forcing will destroy the supercompactness and even the strong compactness of κ
  •  50
    Indestructible Weakly Compact Cardinals and the Necessity of Supercompactness for Certain Proof Schemata
    with Arthur W. Apter
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 47 (4): 563-572. 2001.
    We show that if the weak compactness of a cardinal is made indestructible by means of any preparatory forcing of a certain general type, including any forcing naively resembling the Laver preparation, then the cardinal was originally supercompact. We then apply this theorem to show that the hypothesis of supercompactness is necessary for certain proof schemata
  •  177
    Every countable model of set theory embeds into its own constructible universe
    Journal of Mathematical Logic 13 (2): 1350006. 2013.
    The main theorem of this article is that every countable model of set theory 〈M, ∈M〉, including every well-founded model, is isomorphic to a submodel of its own constructible universe 〈LM, ∈M〉 by means of an embedding j : M → LM. It follows from the proof that the countable models of set theory are linearly pre-ordered by embeddability: if 〈M, ∈M〉 and 〈N, ∈N〉 are countable models of set theory, then either M is isomorphic to a submodel of N or conversely. Indeed, these models are pre-well-ordere…Read more
  •  154
    What is the theory without power set?
    with Victoria Gitman and Thomas A. Johnstone
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 62 (4-5): 391-406. 2016.
    We show that the theory, consisting of the usual axioms of but with the power set axiom removed—specifically axiomatized by extensionality, foundation, pairing, union, infinity, separation, replacement and the assertion that every set can be well‐ordered—is weaker than commonly supposed and is inadequate to establish several basic facts often desired in its context. For example, there are models of in which ω1 is singular, in which every set of reals is countable, yet ω1 exists, in which there a…Read more
  •  73
    Infinite Time Turing Machines With Only One Tape
    with Daniel Evan Seabold
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 47 (2): 271-287. 2001.
    Infinite time Turing machines with only one tape are in many respects fully as powerful as their multi-tape cousins. In particular, the two models of machine give rise to the same class of decidable sets, the same degree structure and, at least for partial functions f : ℝ → ℕ, the same class of computable functions. Nevertheless, there are infinite time computable functions f : ℝ → ℝ that are not one-tape computable, and so the two models of infinitary computation are not equivalent. Surprisingl…Read more