In model theory, a discipline within the field of mathematical logic, a tame abstract elementary class is an abstract elementary class (AEC) which satisfies a locality property for types called tameness. Even though it appears implicitly in earlier work of Shelah, tameness as a property of AEC was first isolated by Grossberg and VanDieren,[1] who observed that tame AECs were much easier to handle than general AECs.
Let K be an AEC with joint embedding, amalgamation, and no maximal models. Just like in first-order model theory, this implies K has a universal model-homogeneous monster model C {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {C}}} . Working inside C {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {C}}} , we can define a semantic notion of types by specifying that two elements a and b have the same type over some base model M {\displaystyle M} if there is an automorphism of the monster model sending a to b fixing M {\displaystyle M} pointwise (note that types can be defined in a similar manner without using a monster model[2]). Such types are called Galois types.
One can ask for such types to be determined by their restriction on a small domain. This gives rise to the notion of tameness:
Tame AECs are usually also assumed to satisfy amalgamation.
While (without the existence of large cardinals) there are examples of non-tame AECs,[3] most of the known natural examples are tame.[4] In addition, the following sufficient conditions for a class to be tame are known:
Many results in the model theory of (general) AECs assume weak forms of the Generalized continuum hypothesis and rely on sophisticated combinatorial set-theoretic arguments.[8] On the other hand, the model theory of tame AECs is much easier to develop, as evidenced by the results presented below.
The following are some important results about tame AECs.