From non-commutative diagrams to anti-elementary classes
Abstract
Anti-elementarity is a strong way of ensuring that a class of structures , in a given first-order language, is not closed under elementary equivalence with respect to any infinitary language of the form L ∞λ. We prove that many naturally defined classes are anti-elementary, including the following: the class of all lattices of finitely generated convex -subgroups of members of any class of -groups containing all Archimedean -groups; the class of all semilattices of finitely generated -ideals of members of any nontrivial quasivariety of -groups; the class of all Stone duals of spectra of MV-algebras-this yields a negative solution for the MV-spectrum Problem; the class of all semilattices of finitely generated two-sided ideals of rings; the class of all semilattices of finitely generated submodules of modules; the class of all monoids encoding the nonstable K0-theory of von Neumann regular rings, respectively C*-algebras of real rank zero; (assuming arbitrarily large Erd"os cardinals) the class of all coordinatizable sectionally complemented modular lattices with a large 4-frame. The main underlying principle is that under quite general conditions, for a functor : A → B, if there exists a non-commutative diagram D of A, indexed by a common sort of poset called an almost join-semilattice, such that DI is a commutative diagram for every set I, D is not isomorphic to X for any commutative diagram X in A, then the range of is anti-elementary.
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