Building Robust & Inclusive Democracy
Research/Areas of Interest:

Set Theory, specifically forcing elementary embeddings and large cardinal axioms

Education

  • PhD, University of California Irvine, USA, 2012
  • MS, Mathematics, California State University Long Beach, United States, 2006
  • BA, Mathematics, California State University Long Beach, United States, 2003

Biography

In 1930 Gödel proved his famous Incompleteness Theorem showing that any reasonable system in which to do mathematics is incapable of answering all mathematical questions. Because of this insight the process of discovering, cataloging and comparing independent statements has become an active area of research. I study statements which can not be proven true or false from a given axiom system. Some of the questions to I try to answer about such statements are: •Is that statement relatively consistent with ZFC (and can we prove it is?) •What is the consistency strength of the statement (i.e what additional axioms must we add to ZFC in order to prove it is relatively consistent?) •What does it imply if assumed to be true? •What other undecidable statements are consistent/inconsistent with the statement? •Most recently I have been examining the consistency strength of stationary set reflection at successors of singular cardinals, for instance ��+1��+1. My research makes heavy use of large cardinal properties, elementary embeddings and forcing.