A Course in Model Theory
Details
Can we reproduce the inimitable, or give a new life to what has been af fected by the weariness of existence? Folks, what you have in your hands is a translation into English of a book that was first published in 1985 by its author, that is, myself, at the end of an editorial adventure about which you will find some details later. It was written in a dialect of Latin that is spoken as a native language in some parts of Europe, Canada, the U. S. A. , the West Indies, and is used as a language of communication between several countries in Africa. It is also sometimes used as a lan guage of communication between the members of a much more restricted community: mathematicians. This translation is indeed quite a faithful rendering of the original: Only a final section, on the reals, has been added to Chapter 6, plus a few notes now and then. On the title page you see an inscription in Arabic letters, with a transcription in the Latin (some poorly informed people say English!) alphabet below; I designed the calligraphy myself.
Klappentext
Can we reproduce the inimitable, or give a new life to what has been af fected by the weariness of existence? Folks, what you have in your hands is a translation into English of a book that was first published in 1985 by its author, that is, myself, at the end of an editorial adventure about which you will find some details later. It was written in a dialect of Latin that is spoken as a native language in some parts of Europe, Canada, the U. S. A. , the West Indies, and is used as a language of communication between several countries in Africa. It is also sometimes used as a lan guage of communication between the members of a much more restricted community: mathematicians. This translation is indeed quite a faithful rendering of the original: Only a final section, on the reals, has been added to Chapter 6, plus a few notes now and then. On the title page you see an inscription in Arabic letters, with a transcription in the Latin (some poorly informed people say English!) alphabet below; I designed the calligraphy myself.
Zusammenfassung
"It is with great satisfaction that I welcome the English translation of Poizat's Cours de théorie des modèles ... ." (Frank Wagner, zbMATH 0951.03002, 2022)
Inhalt
1 Elementary Classes of Relations.- The Language Associated with a Relation.- 3 Extensions of the Language: Structures.- 4 Compactness.- 5 The Back-and-Forth Method in ?-Saturated Models.- 6 Examples Illustrating the Back-and-Forth Method.- 7 Arithmetic.- 8 Ordinals and Cardinals.- 9 Saturated Models.- 10 Prime Models.- 11 Heirs.- 12 Special Sons, Morley Sequences.- 13 The Fundamental Order.- 14 Stability and Saturated Models.- 15 Forking.- 16 Strong Types.- 17 Notions of Rank.- 18 Stability and Prime Models.- 19 Stability, Indiscernible Sequences and Weights.- 20 Dimension in Models of a Totally Transcendental Theory.- Index of Notation.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Gewicht 721g
- Untertitel An Introduction to Contemporary Mathematical Logic
- Autor Bruno Poizat
- Titel A Course in Model Theory
- Veröffentlichung 08.10.2012
- ISBN 1461264464
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9781461264460
- Jahr 2012
- Größe H235mm x B155mm x T26mm
- Herausgeber Springer New York
- Anzahl Seiten 480
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Übersetzer M. Klein
- Auflage Softcover reprint of the original 1st edition 2000
- GTIN 09781461264460