Laver's theorem

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Laver's theorem, in order theory, states that order embeddability of countable total orders is a well-quasi-ordering. That is, for every infinite sequence of totally-ordered countable sets, there exists an order embedding from an earlier member of the sequence to a later member. This result was previously known as Fraïssé's conjecture, after Roland Fraïssé, who conjectured it in 1948;Template:R Richard Laver proved the conjecture in 1971. More generally, Laver proved the same result for order embeddings of countable unions of scattered orders.Template:R

In reverse mathematics, the version of the theorem for countable orders is denoted FRA (for Fraïssé) and the version for countable unions of scattered orders is denoted LAV (for Laver).Template:R In terms of the "big five" systems of second-order arithmetic, FRA is known to fall in strength somewhere between the strongest two systems, Π11-CA0 and ATR0, and to be weaker than Π11-CA0. However, it remains open whether it is equivalent to ATR0 or strictly between these two systems in strength.Template:R

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Order theory