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Given any cardinals $\kappa$ and $\lambda$ in $\mathfrak{M}$ , we can use the Levy collapse to give a new model $\mathfrak{M}[G]$ where $\lambda=\kappa$ . Let $P=\Levy(\kappa,\lambda)$ be the set of partial functions $f:\kappa\rightarrow\lambda$ with $|\dom(f)|<\kappa$ . These functions each give partial information about a function $F$ which
collapses $\lambda$ onto $\kappa$ .
Given any generic subset $G$ of $P$ , $\mathfrak{M}[G]$ has a set $G$ , so let $F=\bigcup G$ . Each element of $G$ is a partial function, and they are all compatible, so $F$ is a function. $\dom(G)=\kappa$ since for each $\alpha<\kappa$ the set of $f\in P$ such that $\alpha\in\dom(f)$ is dense (given any function without $\alpha$ , it is trivial to add $(\alpha,0)$ , giving a stronger function which includes $\alpha$ ). Also $\operatorname{range}(G)=\lambda$ since the set of $f\in P$ such that $\alpha<\lambda$ is in the range of $f$ is again dense (the domain of each $f$ is bounded, so if $\beta$ is larger than any element of $\dom(f)$ , $f\cup\{(\beta,\alpha)\}$ is stronger than $f$ and includes $\lambda$ in its domain).
So $F$ is a surjective function from $\kappa$ to $\lambda$ , and $\lambda$ is collapsed in $\mathfrak{M}[G]$ . In addition, $|\Levy(\kappa,\lambda)|=\lambda$ , so it satisfies the $\lambda^+$ chain condition, and therefore $\lambda^+$ is not collapsed, and becomes $\kappa^+$ (since for any ordinal between $\lambda$ and $\lambda^+$ there is already a surjective function to it from $\lambda$ ).
We can generalize this by forcing with $P=\Levy(\kappa,<\lambda)$ with $\lambda$ regular, the set of partial functions $f:\lambda\times\kappa\rightarrow\lambda$ such that $f(0,\alpha)=0$ , $|\dom(f)|<\kappa$ and if $\alpha>0$ then $f(\alpha,i)<\alpha$ . In essence, this is the union of $\Levy(\kappa,\eta)$ for each $\kappa<\eta<\lambda$ .
In $\mathfrak{M}[G]$ , define $F=\bigcup G$ and $F_\alpha(\beta)=F(\alpha,\beta)$ . Each $F_\alpha$ is a function from $\kappa$ to $\alpha$ , and by the same argument as above $F_\alpha$ is both total and surjective. Moreover, it can be shown that $P$ satisfies the $\lambda$ chain condition, so $\lambda$ does not collapse and $\lambda=\kappa^+$ .
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