What do the rules of logic say about the meanings of the symbols they govern? In this book, James W. Garson examines the inferential behaviour of logical connectives (such as 'and', 'or', 'not' and 'if ... then'), whose behaviour is defined by strict rules, and proves definitive results concerning e
A ModelโTheoretic Approach to Proof Theory
โ Scribed by Henryk Kotlarski, Zofia Adamowicz, Teresa Bigorajska, Konrad Zdanowski
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 123
- Series
- Trends in Logic 51
- Edition
- 1st ed. 2019
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book presents a detailed treatment of ordinal combinatorics of large sets tailored for independence results. It uses model theoretic and combinatorial methods to obtain results in proof theory, such as incompleteness theorems or a description of the provably total functions of a theory.
In the first chapter, the authors first discusses ordinal combinatorics of finite sets in the style of Ketonen and Solovay. This provides a background for an analysis of subsystems of Peano Arithmetic as well as for combinatorial independence results. Next, the volume examines a variety of proofs of Gรถdel's incompleteness theorems. The presented proofs differ strongly in nature. They show various aspects of incompleteness phenomena. In additon, coverage introduces some classical methods like the arithmetized completeness theorem, satisfaction predicates or partial satisfaction classes. It also applies them in many contexts.
The fourth chapter defines the method of indicators for obtaining independence results. It shows what amount of transfinite induction we have in fragments of Peano arithmetic. Then, it uses combinatorics of large sets of the first chapter to show independence results. The last chapter considers nonstandard satisfaction classes. It presents some of the classical theorems related to them. In particular, it covers the results by S. Smith on definability in the language with a satisfaction class and on models without a satisfaction class.
Overall, the book's content lies on the border between combinatorics, proof theory, and model theory of arithmetic. It offers readers a distinctive approach towards independence results by model-theoretic methods.โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter ....Pages i-xviii
Some Combinatorics (Henryk Kotlarski)....Pages 1-37
Some Model Theory (Henryk Kotlarski)....Pages 39-42
Incompleteness (Henryk Kotlarski)....Pages 43-71
Transfinite Induction (Henryk Kotlarski)....Pages 73-87
Satisfaction Classes (Henryk Kotlarski)....Pages 89-106
Back Matter ....Pages 107-109
โฆ Subjects
Philosophy; Logic; Mathematical Logic and Foundations
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>Theorising the Project aims to explore a thematic approach to architectural design. It conceptualises the design process in a general sense through seven key phases: developing a thematic framework and a line of inquiry to situate the project; investigating the project brief and mapping the pr
<p>This innovative monograph explores a new mathematical formalism in higher-order temporal logic for proving properties about the behavior of systems. Developed by the authors, the goal of this novel approach is to explain what occurs when multiple, distinct system components interact by using a ca
Written by major contributors to the field who are well known within the community, this is the first comprehensive summary of the many results generated by this approach to quantum optics to date. As such, the book analyses selected topics of quantum optics, focusing on atom-field interactions from