[FOM] complete atomless boolean algebras
A.P. Hazen
a.hazen at philosophy.unimelb.edu.au
Sun Aug 20 05:42:09 EDT 2006
Robert Black asks two questions about complete atomless Boolean algebras.
I discuss such algebras (briefly!) in a paper, "Hypergunk," in "The
Monist," vol. 87 (2004), pp. 322-338.
I ***think*** (but am nervously aware that I wasn't terribly rigorous
in my proofs when I was writing the paper) that the answer to Black's
questions is "Yes". One way of getting complete atomless Boolean
algebras is to take the algebras of regular open sets from some
decent topologicalspace. One way to get a topological space is by
starting with the reals or some analogue of them. One way of
getting reals is by taking omega-length sequences of objects chosen
from some finite set (in other words, decimal expansions). What I
***think*** gives the answer is using, as analogues of the real
numbers, decimal expansions where the length of the sequnece is,
not omega but, an inaccessible ordinal.
((If this is wrong... well,I've made embarrassing mistakes before.))
Allen Hazen
Philosophy Department
University of Melbourne
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