Ineffable cardinal
In the mathematics of transfinite numbers, an ineffable cardinal is a certain kind of large cardinal number, introduced by Jensen & Kunen (1969).
A cardinal number is called almost ineffable if for every
(where
is the powerset of
) with the property that
is a subset of
for all ordinals
, there is a subset
of
having cardinal
and homogeneous for
, in the sense that for any
in
,
.
A cardinal number is called ineffable if for every binary-valued function
, there is a stationary subset of
on which
is homogeneous: that is, either
maps all unordered pairs of elements drawn from that subset to zero, or it maps all such unordered pairs to one.
More generally, is called
-ineffable (for a positive integer
) if for every
there is a stationary subset of
on which
is
-homogeneous (takes the same value for all unordered
-tuples drawn from the subset). Thus, it is ineffable if and only if it is 2-ineffable.
A totally ineffable cardinal is a cardinal that is -ineffable for every
. If
is
-ineffable, then the set of
-ineffable cardinals below
is a stationary subset of
.
Totally ineffable cardinals are of greater consistency strength than subtle cardinals and of lesser consistency strength than remarkable cardinals. A list of large cardinal axioms by consistency strength is available here.
References
- Friedman, Harvey (2001), "Subtle cardinals and linear orderings", Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 107 (1–3): 1–34, doi:10.1016/S0168-0072(00)00019-1.
- Jensen, R. B.; Kunen, K. (1969), Some Combinatorial Properties of L and V, Unpublished manuscript