Nonstandard satisfaction classes.
Fullness of M
A satisfaction class for a model M is e-full, if S decides all If for every Σe sentence (in the sense of M) φ with parameters either φ∈S or ¬φ∈S.
Fullness of M, Full(M)} is the set of those e∈M M for which M has an e-full inductive partial satisfaction class.
It is easy to see that Full(M) is a cut of M and, if Full(M)>ω then M is recursively saturated. Also if M is countable and Full(M) contains an element greater than all definable elements of M, then Full(M)=M.\end{enumerate} \end{prop}
Kaufmann and Schmerl showed that there are completions T of PA, such that for every M⊨T, Full(M) contains no definable nonstandard elements.
Problem: Suppose Full(M)=M, does M have a full inductive satisfaction class?
Reference: Kaufmann, Matt; Schmerl, James H. Remarks on weak notions of saturation in models of Peano arithmetic. J. Symbolic Logic 52 (1987), no. 1, 129–148.
A converse to Tarski?
Let FS(X) be a formula of the language of PA with a additional predicate symbol X expressing that X is a full satisfaction class.
FS(X) is an example of a formula Φ(X) such that
1. Con(PA(X)+Φ(X));
2. If (M,X)⊨Φ(X), then X is not definable in M.
Problem: Suppose Φ(X) satisfies 1. and 2. above. Is it true that for every M and X⊆M, if (M,X)⊨Φ(X), then there is a nonstandard satisfaction class definable in (M,X)?
Reference: Kossak, Roman Four problems concerning recursively saturated models of arithmetic. Special Issue: Models of arithmetic. Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 36 (1995), no. 4, 519–530.