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A Concise Introduction to Mathematical Logic

✍ Scribed by Wolfgang Rautenberg


Publisher
Springer
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Leaves
342
Series
Universitext
Edition
3rd
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Traditional logic as a part of philosophy is one of the oldest scientific disciplines and can be traced back to the Stoics and to Aristotle. Mathematical logic, however, is a relatively young discipline and arose from the endeavors of Peano, Frege, and others to create a logistic foundation for mathematics. It steadily developed during the twentieth century into a broad discipline with several sub-areas and numerous applications in mathematics, informatics, linguistics and philosophy.

This book treats the most important material in a concise and streamlined fashion. The third edition is a thorough and expanded revision of the former. Although the book is intended for use as a graduate text, the first three chapters can easily be read by undergraduates interested in mathematical logic. These initial chapters cover the material for an introductory course on mathematical logic, combined with applications of formalization techniques to set theory. Chapter 3 is partly of descriptive nature, providing a view towards algorithmic decision problems, automated theorem proving, non-standard models including non-standard analysis, and related topics.

The remaining chapters contain basic material on logic programming for logicians and computer scientists, model theory, recursion theory, GΓΆdel’s Incompleteness Theorems, and applications of mathematical logic. Philosophical and foundational problems of mathematics are discussed throughout the text. Each section of the seven chapters ends with exercises some of which of importance for the text itself. There are hints to most of the exercises in a separate file Solution Hints to the Exercises which is not part of the book but is available from the author’s website.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xxi
Propositional Logic....Pages 1-40
First-Order Logic....Pages 41-90
Complete logical Calculi....Pages 91-134
Foundations of Logic Programming....Pages 135-168
Elements of Model Theory....Pages 169-214
Incompleteness and Undecidability....Pages 215-268
On the Theory of Self-Reference....Pages 269-298
Back Matter....Pages 299-319

✦ Subjects


Mathematical Logic and Foundations; Computational Science and Engineering


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