Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 24, 2026

Mouse (set theory)

In set theory, a mouse is a small model of Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with desirable properties. The exact definition depends on the context. In most cases, there is a technical definition of "premouse" and an added condition of iterability : a mouse is then an iterable premouse. The notion of mouse generalizes the concept of a level of Gödel's constructible hierarchy while being able to incorporate large cardinals.

Last revised
Jun 24, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
226 w
Citations
1
Source

In set theory, a mouse is a small model of (a fragment of) Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with desirable properties. The exact definition depends on the context. In most cases, there is a technical definition of "premouse" and an added condition of iterability (referring to the existence of wellfounded iterated ultrapowers): a mouse is then an iterable premouse. The notion of mouse generalizes the concept of a level of Gödel's constructible hierarchy while being able to incorporate large cardinals.

Mice are important ingredients of the construction of core models. The concept was isolated by Ronald Jensen in the 1970s and has been used since then in core model constructions of many authors.

Generally, a mouse exists iff 0 {\displaystyle 0^{\sharp }} exists1p. 661, although some conventions treat any level of the constructible hierarchy as a passive mouse; its iterated ultrapowers are vacuously well-founded because there are no extenders on its sequence with which to take an ultrapower.

References

References

  1. T. Jech, Set Theory: The Third Millennium Edition, revised and expanded (2003). ISBN 3-540-44085-2.