Content deleted Content added
m cleanup a bit. This needs more work. |
Corrected typo (eliminate -> eliminated) |
||
Line 1:
'''Forcing''' in [[recursion theory]] is a modification of [[Paul Cohen (mathematician)|Paul Cohen's]] original [[set theory|set theoretic]] technique of [[forcing (set theory)|forcing]] to deal with the effective concerns in [[recursion theory]]. Conceptually the two techniques are quite similar, in both one attempts to build [[generic set|generic]] objects (intuitively objects that are somehow 'typical') by meeting dense sets. Also both techniques are elegantly described as a relation (customarily denoted <math>\Vdash</math>) between 'conditions' and sentences. However, where set theoretic forcing is usually interested in creating objects that meet every dense set of conditions in the ground model, recursion theoretic forcing only aims to meet dense sets that are arithmetically or hyperarithmetically definable. Therefore some of the more difficult machinery used in set theoretic forcing can be
==Terminology==
|