THE FOUNDATIONS OF MATHEMATICS IN POLAND AFTER WORLD WAR II by
, "
W. MAREK (WARSZAWA) ,
In the period after world war two, Foundation of Mathematics developed in Poland in three main directions:
Set Theory, Hodel Theory, and Recursion Theory.
Obviously the Foundations of Mathematics in Poland were not created in 1945; the roots of interest in these particular domains of sciences one must seek in the investigations of great mathematicians of the between the war period, 1918-1939 and in particular of Banach, Jaskowski, Kuratowski, Lesniewski, Lindenbaum, . ~ukasiewicz, Sierpinski, Tarski and Ulam.
Among those mentioned only Jaskowski,
Kuratowski and Sierpinski lived and worked in Poland after the war.
Banach,
Lindenbaum and Lesniewski vanished or died in the war, and~ukasiewicz, Tarski and Ulam carried over their activities outside of Poland.
It is worth mentioning
that Tarski has maintained contact with Polish scholars up to the present. From the historical point of view, the oldest among the fields listed above is set theory and its foundations.
Immediately after the war, important investi-
gations in this field were carried out by Sierpinski [35], who had already proved during the war the result (previously announced by Lindenbaum and Tarski) that the generalized continuum hypothesis implies the axiom of choice; he subsequently investigated equivalents of the continuum hypothesis. Immediately before the war, Mostowski discovered a general method of independence proofs in set theory with atoms (urelements).
This method, which is nowadays
called the Fraenkel-Mostowski method, is based on the following construction: Let
A
be a set of individuals (i.e. objects which are not sets).
a hierarchy of sets over these individuals as follows: A A U (R~ n P(R~»), for t; > 0 Finally set R = A ; Rt; O \!
We construct U
t;EORD
*The opinions expressed in this paper as well as judgments of the importance of particular papers reflect only the author's opinions and not those of persons and institutions with which he is connected.
These opinions are probably affected by
the author's own mathematical interests and his own ignorances.
"While preparing this paper the author was partially supported by NRC Grant No. A3040.
129
w.
130 Let
G be a group of permutations of
MAREK A ; then for
E G we define the exten-
(~ permutes VA) as follows: ~(a) =
of
which are hereditarily symmetric where a symmetric element is one for which G x set
{
U
is an element of the filter
A of individuals, the group
G, and the filter
of a class which is a model of set theory.
Thus the choice of the U leads to a construction
Now appropriate choice of the above
parameters yields "pathological" models in which normally the axiom of choice is invalid although some of its consequences may hold.
Numerous papers by Mostowski
and other mathematicians using this method provided deeper insight into the role of the axiom of choice in mathematics.
Among them one is compelled to mention
the investigations of Mostowski on the finite axioms of choice [13].
An interest-
ing feature of these investigations was an application of the methods of finite groups to the investigation of interconnections between the axioms of choice for families of n-element sets (for various n). Investigations in the foundations of set theory were conducted at that time mostly by Mostowski.
In evaluating the developments in the early fifties, one must
mention two of his results.
Seeking a semantic proof of the incompleteness of
Peano arithmetic [15], Mostowski proves the following theorem (and also finds another undecidable statement) which nowadays is generally called "Mostowski's contraction lemma" - one of the basic tools for modern investigations in the foundations of set theory. This theorem states the following. 2 where E C A , with the following properties: 1°