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The Birth of Model Theory: Lowenheim's Theorem in the Frame of the Theory of Relatives

von Calixto Badesa

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L©œwenheim's theorem reflects a critical point in the history of mathematical logic, for it marks the birth of model theory--that is, the part of logic that concerns the relationship between formal theories and their models. However, while the original proofs of other, comparably significant theorems are well understood, this is not the case with L©œwenheim's theorem. For example, the very result that scholars attribute to L©œwenheim today is not the one that Skolem--a logician raised in the algebraic tradition, like L©œwenheim--appears to have attributed to him. In The Birth of Model Theory, Calixto Badesa provides both the first sustained, book-length analysis of L©œwenheim's proof and a detailed description of the theoretical framework--and, in particular, of the algebraic tradition--that made the theorem possible. Badesa's three main conclusions amount to a completely new interpretation of the proof, one that sharply contradicts the core of modern scholarship on the topic. First, L©œwenheim did not use an infinitary language to prove his theorem; second, the functional interpretation of L©œwenheim's normal form is anachronistic, and inappropriate for reconstructing the proof; and third, L©œwenheim did not aim to prove the theorem's weakest version but the stronger version Skolem attributed to him. This book will be of considerable interest to historians of logic, logicians, philosophers of logic, and philosophers of mathematics.… (mehr)
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L©œwenheim's theorem reflects a critical point in the history of mathematical logic, for it marks the birth of model theory--that is, the part of logic that concerns the relationship between formal theories and their models. However, while the original proofs of other, comparably significant theorems are well understood, this is not the case with L©œwenheim's theorem. For example, the very result that scholars attribute to L©œwenheim today is not the one that Skolem--a logician raised in the algebraic tradition, like L©œwenheim--appears to have attributed to him. In The Birth of Model Theory, Calixto Badesa provides both the first sustained, book-length analysis of L©œwenheim's proof and a detailed description of the theoretical framework--and, in particular, of the algebraic tradition--that made the theorem possible. Badesa's three main conclusions amount to a completely new interpretation of the proof, one that sharply contradicts the core of modern scholarship on the topic. First, L©œwenheim did not use an infinitary language to prove his theorem; second, the functional interpretation of L©œwenheim's normal form is anachronistic, and inappropriate for reconstructing the proof; and third, L©œwenheim did not aim to prove the theorem's weakest version but the stronger version Skolem attributed to him. This book will be of considerable interest to historians of logic, logicians, philosophers of logic, and philosophers of mathematics.

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