Standard model (set theory)
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In set theory, a standard model for a theory T is a model M for T where the membership relation ∈M is the same as the membership relation ∈ of a set theoretical universe V (restricted to the domain of M). In other words, M is a substructure of V. A standard model M that satisfies the additional transitivity condition that x ∈ y ∈ M implies x ∈ M is a standard transitive model (or simply a transitive model).
Usually, when one talks about a model M of set theory, it is assumed that M is a set model, i.e. the domain of M is a set in V. If the domain of M is a proper class, then M is a class model. An inner model is necessarily a class model.
References
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- {{cite book|last= Cohen |first=P. J.|title = Set theory and the continuum hypothesis|year = 1966|publisher = Addison–Wesley|isbn = 978-0-8053-2327-6}}
- {{cite arXiv|eprint=0712.1320 |last1=Chow |first1=Timothy Y. |title=A beginner's guide to forcing |year=2007 |class=math.LO }}
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