Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Notations and conventions
- Remarks on the development of the area
- Section summaries
- Chapter 1 Some preliminaries
- Chapter 2 Positive primitive formulas and the sets they define
- Chapter 3 Stability and totally transcendental modules
- Chapter 4 Hulls
- Chapter 5 Forking and ranks
- Chapter 6 Stability-theoretic properties of types
- Chapter 7 Superstable modules
- Chapter 8 The lattice of pp-types and free realisations of pp-types
- Chapter 9 Types and the structure of pure-injective modules
- Chapter 10 Dimension and decomposition
- Chapter 11 Modules over artinian rings
- Chapter 12 Functor categories
- Chapter 13 Modules over Artin algebras
- Chapter 14 Projective and flat modules
- Chapter 15 Torsion and torsionfree classes
- Chapter 16 Elimination of quantifiers
- Chapter 17 Decidability and undecidability
- Problems page
- Bibliography
- Examples index
- Notation index
- Index
Chapter 2 - Positive primitive formulas and the sets they define
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Notations and conventions
- Remarks on the development of the area
- Section summaries
- Chapter 1 Some preliminaries
- Chapter 2 Positive primitive formulas and the sets they define
- Chapter 3 Stability and totally transcendental modules
- Chapter 4 Hulls
- Chapter 5 Forking and ranks
- Chapter 6 Stability-theoretic properties of types
- Chapter 7 Superstable modules
- Chapter 8 The lattice of pp-types and free realisations of pp-types
- Chapter 9 Types and the structure of pure-injective modules
- Chapter 10 Dimension and decomposition
- Chapter 11 Modules over artinian rings
- Chapter 12 Functor categories
- Chapter 13 Modules over Artin algebras
- Chapter 14 Projective and flat modules
- Chapter 15 Torsion and torsionfree classes
- Chapter 16 Elimination of quantifiers
- Chapter 17 Decidability and undecidability
- Problems page
- Bibliography
- Examples index
- Notation index
- Index
Summary
If K is an algebraically closed field then the sets of n-tuples which may be defined by positive quantifier-free formulas are precisely the sub-varieties of affine n-space. The Chevalley-Tarski theorem says that every definable subset of affine n-space is a boolean combination of such sub-varieties (is “constructible”). The point is that the existential quantifiers introduced by projection may be eliminated: one says that algebraically closed fields have (complete) elimination of quantifiers.
For comparison one may consider the theory of groups. Here the definition of a subset may require arbitrarily large numbers of alternations of quantifiers, and there seems to be no hope of understanding the shape of a general definable set.
Modules are definitely closer to algebraically closed fields than to groups in this regard. For modules have a relative elimination of quantifiers: it turns out that every definable subset of a module is a boolean combination of “pp-definable” cosets. A pp-definable coset is simply the projection of the solution set to a (not necessarily homogeneous) system of R-linear equations. Therefore, such a coset is definable by a formula with only existential quantifiers prefixing a conjunction of atomic formulas (a “positive primitive” formula): we say that modules have ppelimination of quantifiers. It is this fact which brings the model-theoretic and algebraic aspects of modules close together.
This description of the definable subsets is the key to the model-theoretic analysis of modules.
The reader should know that the pace of this chapter is rather leisurely so as to accommodate a wide variation in readers' backgrounds. A number of examples are introduced and many of these are developed further in the text.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Model Theory and Modules , pp. 13 - 53Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988