Cotolerant sequence
|
In mathematical logic, a cotolerant sequence is a sequence
- <math>T_1, \ldots, T_n<math>
of formal theories such that there are consistent extensions <math>S_1, \ldots, S_n<math> of these theories with each <math>S_{i+1}<math> is cointerpretable in <math>S_i<math>. Cotolerance naturally generalizes from sequences of theories to trees of theories.
This concept, together with its dual concept of tolerance, was introduced by Japaridze (http://www.csc.villanova.edu/~japaridz/) in 1992, who also proved that, for Peano arithmetic and any stronger theories with effective axiomatizations, tolerance is equivalent to <math>\Sigma_1<math>-consistency.
See also: interpretability, cointerpretability, interpretability logic.
References
- G.Japaridze (http://www.csc.villanova.edu/~japaridz/), The logic of linear tolerance. Studia Logica 51 (1992), pp. 249-277.
- G.Japaridze (http://www.csc.villanova.edu/~japaridz/study.html), A generalized notion of weak interpretability and the corresponding logic. Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 61 (1993), pp. 113-160.
- G.Japaridze (http://www.csc.villanova.edu/~japaridz/study.html) and D. de Jongh, The logic of provability. Handbook of Proof Theory. S.Buss, ed. Elsevier, 1998, pp. 476-546.