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A topos is said to be Boolean if its internal language is classical. It is named after the English mathematician George Boole (1815–64), who was the first to give an algebraic presentation of the classical calculus of propositions. A Boolean topos is local under the following circumstances. The disjunction property (2) holds in a Boolean topos if and only if, for every closed formula p, either p is true or ¬p is true. Moreover, with the help of De Morgan’s laws, the existence property (3) may then be rephrased thus: if ϕ(a) is true for all closed terms a of type A, then ∀xAϕ(x) is true. As it turns out, a Boolean local topos may be described more simply, without referring to the internal language, as a topos with the following property: if f, g : AB are arrows such that fa = ga for all a : 1 → A, then f = g. (Here 1 is the so-called terminal object, with the property that, for each object C, there is a unique arrow C → 1.) For the Boolean topos to be ω-complete requires furthermore that all numerals—that is, closed terms of type N in its internal language—be standard—that is, have the form 0, S0, SS0, and so on.

Of course, Gödel’s completeness theorem shows that there are plenty of Boolean local topoi to model pure classical type theory in, but the usual proof of their existence requires nonconstructive arguments. It would be interesting to exhibit at least one such model constructively.

As a first step toward constructing a distinguished ω-complete Boolean model of ℒ1 one might wish to define the notion of truth in ℒ1, as induced by this model. Tarski had shown how truth can be defined for classical first-order arithmetic, a language that admits, aside from formulas, only terms of type N. Tarski achieved this essentially by incorporating ω-completeness into the definition of truth. It is not obvious whether his method can be extended to classical higher-order arithmetic—that is, to classical type theory. In fact, Tarski himself showed that the notion of truth is not definable (in a technical sense) in such a system. If his notion of definability corresponds to what is here meant by constructibility, then it is possible to conclude that, indeed, no Boolean model can be constructed.

One may be tempted to consider as a candidate for the distinguished Boolean local topos the so-called von Neumann universe. This is defined as the union of a class of sets containing the empty set (the initial object in the category of sets) and closed under the power-set operation and under transfinite unions—thus, as a subcategory of the category of sets. But what is the category of sets if not the distinguished Boolean local topos being sought?

A better candidate may be Gödel’s constructible universe, whose original purpose was to serve as a model of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory in which the continuum hypothesis holds. It is formed like the von Neumann universe, except that the notion of subset, implicit in the power-set operation, is replaced by that of definable subset. Is it possible that this universe can be constructed syntactically, like the free topos, without reference to any previously given category of sets, or by a universal property?

In the internal language of a Boolean local topos, the logical connectives and quantifiers have their natural meanings. In particular, quantifiers admit a substitutional interpretation, a desirable property that has been discussed by philosophers (among them, Russell and the American logician Saul Kripke [born 1940])—to wit: if an existential statement is true, then it can be witnessed by a term of appropriate type in the language; and a universal statement is true if it is witnessed by all terms of the appropriate type.

Note that, in the internal language of the free topos, and therefore in pure intuitionistic type theory, the substitutional interpretation is valid for existential quantifiers, by virtue of the free topos being local, but that it fails for universal quantifiers, in view of the absence of ω-completeness and the fact that in the free topos all numerals are standard. For a Boolean local topos, ω-completeness will also ensure that all numerals are standard, so that numerals mean exactly what they are intended to mean.

One distinguished model or many models

Some mathematicians do not believe that a distinguished world of mathematics should be sought at all, but rather that the multiplicity of such worlds should be looked at simultaneously. A major result in algebraic geometry, due to Alexandre Grothendieck, was the observation that every commutative ring may be viewed as a continuously variable local ring, as Lawvere would put it. In the same spirit, an amplified version of Gödel’s completeness theorem would say that every topos may be viewed as a continuously variable local topos, provided sufficiently many variables (Henkin constants) are adjoined to its internal language. Put in more technical language, this makes the possible worlds of mathematics stalks of a sheaf. However, the question still remains as to where this sheaf lives if not in a distinguished world of mathematics or—perhaps better to say—metamathematics.

These observations suggest that the foundations of mathematics have not achieved a definitive shape but are still evolving; they form the subject of a lively debate among a small group of interested mathematicians, logicians, and philosophers.