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Huge Reflection

Joan Bagaria, Philipp Lücke

Abstract

We study Structural Reflection beyond Vopěnka's Principle, at the level of almost-huge cardinals and higher, up to rank-into-rank embeddings. We identify and classify new large cardinal notions in that region that correspond to some form of what we call Exact Structural Reflection ($\mathrm{ESR}$). Namely, given cardinals $κ<λ$ and a class $\mathcal{C}$ of structures of the same type, the corresponding instance of $\mathrm{ESR}$ asserts that for every structure $A$ in $\mathcal{C}$ of rank $λ$, there is a structure $B$ in $\mathcal{C}$ of rank $κ$ and an elementary embedding of $B$ into $A$. Inspired by the statement of Chang's Conjecture, we also introduce and study sequential forms of $\mathrm{ESR}$, which, in the case of sequences of length $ω$, turn out to be very strong. Indeed, when restricted to $Π_1$-definable classes of structures they follow from the existence of $I1$-embeddings, while for more complicated classes of structures, e.g., $Σ_2$, they are not known to be consistent. Thus, these principles unveil a new class of large cardinals that go beyond $I1$-embeddings, yet they may not fall into Kunen's Inconsistency.

Huge Reflection

Abstract

We study Structural Reflection beyond Vopěnka's Principle, at the level of almost-huge cardinals and higher, up to rank-into-rank embeddings. We identify and classify new large cardinal notions in that region that correspond to some form of what we call Exact Structural Reflection (). Namely, given cardinals and a class of structures of the same type, the corresponding instance of asserts that for every structure in of rank , there is a structure in of rank and an elementary embedding of into . Inspired by the statement of Chang's Conjecture, we also introduce and study sequential forms of , which, in the case of sequences of length , turn out to be very strong. Indeed, when restricted to -definable classes of structures they follow from the existence of -embeddings, while for more complicated classes of structures, e.g., , they are not known to be consistent. Thus, these principles unveil a new class of large cardinals that go beyond -embeddings, yet they may not fall into Kunen's Inconsistency.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 10 sections, 50 theorems, 37 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.2

The following statements are equivalent for every singular cardinal $\kappa$:

Theorems & Definitions (118)

  • Definition 1.1: Exact Structural Reflection
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Definition 1.3
  • Theorem 1.4
  • Theorem 1.5
  • Definition 1.6
  • Theorem 1.7
  • Definition 1.8
  • Theorem 1.9
  • Proposition 2.1
  • ...and 108 more