Guessing models and generalized Laver diamond
Matteo Viale

TL;DR
This paper explores guessing models as a combinatorial tool to characterize large cardinal axioms, introducing a new structural property related to PFA, and applying it to prove the singular cardinal hypothesis and the failure of the square principle.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of guessing models as prototypes for elementary embeddings, linking them to large cardinal properties and PFA, and develops new structural properties like Laver functions within this framework.
Findings
Guessing models can characterize large cardinal axioms.
Existence of guessing models with _2 can be derived from PFA.
Failure of the square principle follows from guessing models.
Abstract
We analyze the notion of guessing model, a way to assign combinatorial properties to arbitrary regular cardinals. Guessing models can be used, in combination with inaccessibility, to characterize various large cardinals axioms, ranging from supercompactness to rank-to-rank embeddings. The majority of these large cardinals properties can be defined in terms of suitable elementary embeddings j\colon V_\gamma \to V_\lambda. One key observation is that such embeddings are uniquely determined by the image structures j [ V_\gamma ]\prec V_\lambda. These structures will be the prototypes guessing models. We shall show, using guessing models M, how to prove for the ordinal \kappa_M=j_M (\crit(j_M)) (where \pi_M is the transitive collapse of M and j_M is its inverse) many of the combinatorial properties that we can prove for the cardinal j(\crit(j)) using the structure j[V_\gamma]\prec…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Topology and Set Theory · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology
