Mathematical Logic

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What is a mathematical proof? How can proofs be justified? Are there limitations to provability? To what extent can machines carry out mathe­ matical proofs? Only in this century has there been success in obtaining substantial and satisfactory answers. The present book contains a systematic discussion of these results. The investigations are centered around first-order logic. Our first goal is Godel's completeness theorem, which shows that the con­ sequence relation coincides with formal provability: By means of a calcu­ lus consisting of simple formal inference rules, one can obtain all conse­ quences of a given axiom system (and in particular, imitate all mathemat­ ical proofs). A short digression into model theory will help us to analyze the expres­ sive power of the first-order language, and it will turn out that there are certain deficiencies. For example, the first-order language does not allow the formulation of an adequate axiom system for arithmetic or analysis. On the other hand, this difficulty can be overcome--even in the framework of first-order logic-by developing mathematics in set-theoretic terms. We explain the prerequisites from set theory necessary for this purpose and then treat the subtle relation between logic and set theory in a thorough manner.

Author(s): H.-D. Ebbinghaus, J. Flum, W. Thomas
Series: Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Edition: 2nd
Publisher: Springer
Year: 1994

Language: English
Pages: 289
Tags: Mathematical Logic and Foundations

Front Matter....Pages i-x
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Introduction....Pages 3-9
Syntax of First-Order Languages....Pages 11-25
Semantics of First-Order Languages....Pages 27-57
A Sequent Calculus....Pages 59-74
The Completeness Theorem....Pages 75-85
The Löwenheim-Skolem Theorem and the Compactness Theorem....Pages 87-98
The Scope of First-Order Logic....Pages 99-114
Syntactic Interpretations and Normal Forms....Pages 115-133
Front Matter....Pages 135-135
Extensions of First-Order Logic....Pages 137-149
Limitations of the Formal Method....Pages 151-187
Free Models and Logic Programming....Pages 189-241
An Algebraic Characterization of Elementary Equivalence....Pages 243-259
Lindström’s Theorems....Pages 261-276
Back Matter....Pages 277-290