Morley’s number of countable models
Abstract
A theory formulated in a countable predicate calculus can have at most
2א0 nonisomorphic countable models. In 1961 R. L. Vaught [9] conjected
that if such a theory has uncountably many countable models, then it has
exactly 2א0 countable models. This would of course follow immediately
if one assumed the continuum hypothesis to be true. Almost ten years
later, M. Morley [5] proved that if a countable theory has strictly more
than א1 countable models, then it has 2א0 countable models.
This leaves us with the possibility that a theory has exactly א1 , but
not 2א0 countable models — and even today, Vaught’s question remains
unanswered.
This paper is an attempt to shed a little light on Morley’s proof.
Degree
Student essay