English

Some nonstandard equivalences in Reverse Mathematics

Logic 2018-05-10 v2

Abstract

Reverse Mathematics (RM) is a program in the foundations of mathematics founded by Friedman and developed extensively by Simpson. The aim of RM is finding the minimal axioms needed to prove a theorem of ordinary (i.e. non-set theoretical) mathematics. In the majority of cases, one also obtains an equivalence between the theorem and its minimal axioms. This equivalence is established in a weak logical system called the base theory; four prominent axioms which boast lots of such equivalences are dubbed mathematically natural by Simpson. In this paper, we show that a number of axioms from Nonstandard Analysis are equivalent to theorems of ordinary mathematics not involving Nonstandard Analysis. These equivalences are proved in a weak base theory recently introduced by van den Berg and the author. In particular, our base theories have the first-order strength of elementary function arithmetic, in contrast to the original version of this paper [22]. Our results combined with Simpson's criterion for naturalness suggest the controversial point that Nonstandard Analysis is actually mathematically natural.

Cite

@article{arxiv.1804.07952,
  title  = {Some nonstandard equivalences in Reverse Mathematics},
  author = {Sam Sanders},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.07952},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

10 pages, original version published in LNCS, Proceedings of CiE18

R2 v1 2026-06-23T01:31:02.667Z