Two prisoners are told that they will be
brought to a room and seated so that each can see the
other. Hats will be placed on their heads; each hat is
either red or green. The two prisoners must
simultaneously submit a guess of their own hat color,
and they both go free if at least one of them guesses
correctly. While no communication is allowed once the
hats have been placed, they will, however, be allowed to
have a strategy session before being brought to the
room. Is there a strategy ensuring their release? The
answer turns out to be yes, and this is the simplest
non-trivial example of a “hat problem.” This book
deals with the question of how successfully one can
predict the value of an arbitrary function at one or
more points of its domain based on some knowledge of its
values at other points. Topics range from hat problems
that are accessible to everyone willing to think hard,
to some advanced topics in set theory and infinitary
combinatorics. For example, there is a method of
predicting the value f(a) of a function f
mapping the reals to the reals, based only on knowledge
of f's values on the open interval (a – 1,
a), and for every such function the prediction is
incorrect only on a countable set that is nowhere dense.
The monograph progresses from topics requiring fewer
prerequisites to those requiring more, with most of the
text being accessible to any graduate student in
mathematics. The broad range of readership includes
researchers, postdocs, and graduate students in the
fields of set theory, mathematical logic, and
combinatorics. The hope is that this book will bring
together mathematicians from different areas to think
about set theory via a very broad array of coordinated
inference problems.
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