Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Theorems_And_Conjectures - Completeness Theorem

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 78    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

         Completeness Theorem:     more books (37)
  1. Beginning Model Theory: The Completeness Theorem and Some Consequences (Oxford Logic Guides) by Jane Bridge, 1977-07
  2. Mathematical Logic : A course with exercises -- Part I -- Propositional Calculus, Boolean Algebras, Predicate Calculus, Completeness Theorems by Rene Cori, Daniel Lascar, 2000-11-09
  3. Polynomial Completeness in Algebraic Systems by Kalle Kaarli, Alden F. Pixley, 2000-07-21
  4. The Mathematics of Logic: A Guide to Completeness Theorems and their Applications by Richard W. Kaye, 2007-07-30
  5. Some abstract formulations of the completeness theorem of Godel (Preprints in mathematics and the mathematical sciences) by William Bennewitz, 1972
  6. A COMPLETENESS THEOREM IN MODAL LOGIC In The Journal of Symbolic Logic Vol. 24, No. 1, March 1959 pp. 1-14 and Abstracts of DISTINGUISHED CONSTITUENTS, SEMANTICAL ANALYSIS OF MODAL LOGIC, THE PROBLEM OF ENTAILMENT In The Journal of Symbolic Logic Vol. 24, No. 4, Dec. 1959 pp. 323-324. by Saul A. KRIPKE, 1959-01-01
  7. Metatheorems: Entscheidungsproblem, Gödel's Completeness Theorem, Compactness Theorem, Gödel's Incompleteness Theorems
  8. Mathematical Logic: A Course with Exercises Part I: Propositional Calculus, Boolean Algebras, Predicate Calculus, Completeness Theorems (Pt.1) by Rene Cori, Daniel Lascar, 2000-11-09
  9. Recursive Functions and Metamathematics: Problems of Completeness and Decidability, Gödel's Theorems (Synthese Library) by Roman Murawski, 2010-11-02
  10. Kolmogorov complexity: English language, Complexity, Turing completeness, Godel´s incompleteness theorems, Halting problem, Grammar induction, List of ... in theoretical computer science.
  11. Ultraproduct: Mathematics, Abstract Algebra, Model Theory, Mathematical Logic ,Structure, Hyperreal Number, Gödel's Completeness Theorem Non-Standard Analysis
  12. Mathematical Logic: Propositional Calculus, Boolean Algebras, Predicate Calculus, Completeness Theorems by Rene Cori, 2000-01-01
  13. Completeness theorems for the systems E of entailment and Eq of entailment with quantification (U.S. Office of Naval Research. Group Psychology Branch. Technical Report) by Alan Ross Anderson, 1959
  14. OBJ as a theorem prover (Technical report. SRI International. Computer Science Laboratory) by Joseph Goguen, 1988

1. Godel's Completeness Theorem
Godel's completeness theorem In order to illustrate Godel's completeness theorem, I'll give an example. Suppose that we work in a language that has the symbols 0 1 + , and *.
http://www.math.uiuc.edu/~mileti/complete.html
Godel's Completeness Theorem
In order to illustrate Godel's Completeness Theorem, I'll give an example. Suppose that we work in a language that has the symbols 0,1,+,-, and *. In this language, we have the following axioms which I will collectively refer to as F: 1) 0+a = a
2) a+(b+c) = (a+b)+c
3) a+(-a) =
4) a+b = b+a
5) 1*a = a
6) a*(b*c) = (a*b)*c
7) For any a not equal to 0, there exists some b with a*b = 1
8) a*b = b*a
9) a*(b+c) = (a*b)+(a*c)
10) does not equal 1
If you have some familiarity with Abstract Algebra abstract algebra, then you might recognize these as the field axioms. Now there are many mathematical frameworks in which the above axioms are true. For example, if we are working in the rational (fractional) numbers Q, then all of the above statements are true (when we interpret 0,1,+,-, and * in the usual way). Similarly, all of the above statements are true if we are working in the real numbers R or the complex numbers C. On the other hand, if we're working the integers Z, then statement 7) above is not true (there is no integer n such that 2*n = 1). Logicians call a mathematical framework (or mathematical universe) that satisfy these axioms a *model* of the axioms. Hence, each of Q, R, and C are models of F, but Z is not a model of F. Now one would hope that if we could prove a statement from the axioms F, then that statement should be true in any model of F. That is, our proof system is "sound" in the sense that if we can prove a statement from F, then that statement should logically follow from F. This fact is true and is called the Soundness Theorem. For example, one can prove the statement "If a+a = a, then a = 0" from the above axioms F, and sure enough, this is true in each of Q, R, and C. The really interesting question is the converse, i.e. if a statement is true in every model of F, must it be the case that we can prove it from F?

2. The Completeness Theorem
The completeness theorem. It is a variant of the famous completeness theorem,first proved in 1930 by the great logician Kurt Gödel 5,22.
http://www.math.psu.edu/simpson/papers/philmath/node10.html

3. A Completeness Theorem For Kleene Algebras And The Algebra Of Regular Events - K
A completeness theorem for Kleene Algebras and the Algebra of Regular Events (1994) (Make Corrections) (56 citations)
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/kozen94completeness.html
A Completeness Theorem for Kleene Algebras and the Algebra of Regular Events (1994) (Make Corrections) (56 citations)
Dexter Kozen Logic in Computer Science
Home/Search
Context Related View or download:
cornell.edu/kozen/papers/ka.ps

Cached: PS.gz PS PDF DjVu ... Help
From: cornell.edu/Kozen/papers papers (more)
Homepages: D.Kozen HPSearch (Update Links)
Rate this article: (best)
Comment on this article
(Enter summary)
Abstract: (Update)
Context of citations to this paper: More ...results. These we now briefly recall for the sake of historical completeness. The interested reader is invited to consult, e.g. Foundation, Department of Computer Science, Aalborg University, Fr. Bajersvej 7E, 9220 Aalborg , Denmark. Partially supported... ...and has yielded a collection of very deep and beautiful mathematical results. The interested reader is invited to consult, e.g. for an overview of the results that have been obtained within this line of research. According to the point of view of... Cited by: More Nonfinite Axiomatizability of the Equational Theory of Shuffle - Ésik, Bertol (1998) (Correct) From Ready Simulation Semantics to Completed Tracs - Fokkink, Ingólfsdóttir (1996) ... (Correct) Active bibliography (related documents): More All Kleene Algebra with Tests - Kozen (1999) (Correct) ... (Correct) Similar documents based on text: More All Parikh's Theorem in Commutative Kleene Algebra - Hopkins, Kozen (1999)

4. Untitled
1. The Propositional Calculus Boolean operations, truth assignments, the tableaumethod, the completeness theorem, the Compactness Theorem, combinatorial
http://www.math.psu.edu/simpson/courses/math557/fall00.html

5. The Completeness Theorem For System AS1The Completeness Theorem For Previous Def
On Statman's Finite completeness theorem (1992) (Make Corrections) (1 citation)
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~gmhwww/513/pdf/C11.pdf

6. A General NP-Completeness Theorem - Megiddo (ResearchIndex)
A General NPcompleteness theorem (1993) (Make 1980 BibTeX entry (Update) Megiddo,N. A general NP-completeness theorem. In Hirsch, Marsden Shub (1993).
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/322.html

7. Citations: A Completeness Theorem And Computer Program For Finding Theorems Deri
R. Lee. A completeness theorem and computer program for finding theorems derivablefrom given axioms. PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1967.
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/context/40384/0
27 citations found. Retrieving documents...
R. C. Lee. A Completeness Theorem and a Computer Program for Finding Theorems Derivable from Given Axioms . PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1967.
Home/Search
Document Not in Database Summary Related Articles Check
This paper is cited in the following contexts:
First 50 documents
Improving the Efficiency of Reasoning Through Structure-Based .. - Amir, Mcllraith (2000)
(Correct) ....99 s signature is in (l(i, j) then add 99 to the set of axioms of 4. If we proved 62 in .A, return YES. Fig A forward message passing algorithm. This algorithm exploits consequence finding (step 2) to perform reasoning in the individual partitions. Consequence finding was defined by Lee to be the problem of finding all the logical consequences of a theory or sentences that subsume them. In Mr, we can use any sound and complete consequence finding algorithm. The resolution rule is complete for consequence finding (e.g. 27,41] and a the same is Using FORWARD M P to prove ....
....partitions.

8. Model Theory. Skolem's Paradox. Ramsey's Theorem.
in the way that we can reduce the disjunction in the strong completeness theorem to a single disjunct (due to lemma 4.1).
http://www.ltn.lv/~podnieks/gta.html
model theory, Skolem paradox, Ramsey theorem, Loewenheim, categorical, Ramsey, Skolem, Gödel, completeness theorem, categoricity, Goedel, theorem, completeness, Godel Back to title page Left Adjust your browser window Right
Appendix 1. About Model Theory
Some widespread Platonist superstitions were derived from other important results of mathematical logic (omitted in the main text of this book): Goedel's completeness theorem for predicate calculus, Loewenheim-Skolem theorem, the categoricity theorem of second order Peano axioms. In this short Appendix I will discuss these results and their methodological consequences (or lack of them). All these results have been obtained by means of the so-called model theory . This is a very specific approach to investigation of formal theories as mathematical objects. Model theory is using the full power of set theory. Its results and proofs can be formalized in the set theory ZFC Model theory is investigation of formal theories in the metatheory ZFC. The main structures of model theory are interpretations . Let L be the language of some (first order) formal theory containing constant letters c , ..., c

9. Goedel's Completeness Theorem - Wikipedia
Goedel's completeness theorem. (Redirected from Goedels completeness theorem). Thisdissertation is the original source of the proof of the completeness theorem.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goedels_completeness_theorem

10. Completeness Theorems. Model Theory. Mathematical Logic. Part 4.
model theory, interpretation, completeness theorem, Post, truth table, truth, Skolem, table, paradox, model,
http://www.ltn.lv/~podnieks/mlog/ml4.htm
model theory, interpretation, completeness theorem, Post, truth table, truth, Skolem, table, paradox, model, completeness, Skolem paradox, formula, logically valid, true Back to title page Left Adjust your browser window Right
4. Completeness Theorems (Model Theory)
  • Interpretations Classical propositional calculus - truth tables Classical predicate calculus - Goedel's completeness theorem Constructive propositional calculus - Kripke models 4.4. Constructive predicate calculus - Kripke models 4.5. Finite interpretations - Trakhtenbrot's theorem
  • 4.0. Interpretations
    Let us recall the beginning part of Section 1.2 The vision behind the notion of first order languages is centered on the so-called "domain" - a collection of "objects" that you wish to "describe" by using the language. Thus, the first kind of language elements you will need are variables x, y, z, x , y , z The above-mentioned "domain" is the intended "range" of all these variables. The next possibility we may wish to have in our language are the so-called constant letters - symbols denoting some specific "objects" of our "domain".

    11. Theorem 3.2.2: Completeness Theorem In R
    Theorem 3.2.2 completeness theorem in R. Let be a Cauchy sequence of realnumbers. Then the sequence is bounded. Let be a sequence of real numbers.
    http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/numseq/proofs/cauconv.html
    Theorem 3.2.2: Completeness Theorem in R
    Let be a Cauchy sequence of real numbers. Then the sequence is bounded. Let be a sequence of real numbers. The sequence is Cauchy if and only if it converges to some limit a Context
    Proof:
    The proof of the first statement follows closely the proof of the corresponding result for convergent sequences. Can you do it ? To prove the second, more important statement, we have to prove two parts: First, assume that the sequence converges to some limit a . Take any . There exists an integer N such that if then j . Hence: j - a k j k if . Thus, the sequence is Cauchy. Second, assume that the sequence is Cauchy (this direction is much harder). Define the set S R j Since the sequence is bounded (by part one of the theorem), say by a constant M , we know that every term in the sequence is bigger than -M . Therefore -M is contained in S . Also, every term of the sequence is smaller than M , so that S is bounded by M . Hence, S is a non-empty, bounded subset of the real numbers, and by the least upper bound property it has a well-defined, unique least upper bound. Let a = sup( S We will now show that this a is indeed the limit of the sequence. Take any

    12. 3.2. Cauchy Sequences
    Theorem 3.2.2 completeness theorem in R. Let Note that the CompletenessTheorem not true if we consider only rational numbers. For
    http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/numseq/causeq.html
    3.2. Cauchy Sequences
    IRA What is slightly annoying for the mathematician (in theory and in praxis) is that we refer to the limit of a sequence in the definition of a convergent sequence when that limit may not be known at all. In fact, more often then not it is quite hard to determine the actual limit of a sequence. We would prefer to have a definition which only includes the known elements of the particular sequence in question and does not rely on the unknown limit. Therefore, we will introduce the following definition: Definition 3.2.1: Cauchy Sequence Let be a sequence of real (or complex) numbers. We say that the sequence satisfies the Cauchy criterion (or simply is Cauchy ) if for each there is an integer such that if then j - a k This definition states precisely what it means for the elements of a sequence to get closer together, and to stay close together. Of course, we want to know what the relation between Cauchy sequences and convergent sequences is. Theorem 3.2.2: Completeness Theorem in R Let be a Cauchy sequence of real numbers. Then the sequence is bounded.

    13. Strong Completeness Theorem For MLL
    PrevNextIndexThread Strong completeness theorem for MLL. On the other hand,there is the challenge of obtaining a {\em strong completeness theorem}.
    http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/types/archives/1992/msg00075.html
    [Prev] [Next] [Index] [Thread]
    Strong Completeness Theorem for MLL

    14. Completeness Theorem For Typed Lambda-Omega Calculus
    completeness theorem for Typed LambdaOmega Calculus. To ynm@math.ucla.edu;Subject completeness theorem for Typed Lambda-Omega Calculus;
    http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/types/archives/1989/msg00087.html
    [Prev] [Next] [Index] [Thread]
    Completeness Theorem for Typed Lambda-Omega Calculus

    15. Gödel's Completeness Theorem -- From MathWorld
    MathWorld Logo. Alphabetical Index. Eric's other sites. Foundations ofMathematics , Logic , Decidability v. Gödel's completeness theorem,
    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GoedelsCompletenessTheorem.html

    Foundations of Mathematics
    Logic Decidability
    If T is a set of axioms in a first-order language, and a statement p holds for any structure M satisfying T , then p can be formally deduced from T in some appropriately defined fashion.
    References Beth, E. W. The Foundations of Mathematics. Amsterdam, Netherlands: North-Holland, 1959.
    Author: Eric W. Weisstein
    Wolfram Research, Inc.

    16. Generalized Completeness Theorem -- From MathWorld
    Foundations of Mathematics , Logic , General Logic v. Generalized CompletenessTheorem, The proposition that every consistent generalized theory has a model.
    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GeneralizedCompletenessTheorem.html

    Foundations of Mathematics
    Logic General Logic
    Generalized Completeness Theorem

    The proposition that every consistent generalized theory has a model . The theorem is true if the axiom of choice is assumed. Axiom of Choice
    References Mendelson, E. Introduction to Mathematical Logic, 4th ed.
    Author: Eric W. Weisstein
    Wolfram Research, Inc.

    17. (Ishihara H., Khoussainov B.) Effectiveness Of The Completeness Theorem For An I
    Effectiveness of the completeness theorem for an Intermediate Logic 1.Hajime Ishihara (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
    http://www.jucs.org/jucs_3_11/effectiveness_of_the_completeness
    User: anonymous Special Issues Sample Issues Volume 9 (2003) Volume 8 (2002) ... Printed Publications
    available in: Comment: get:
    Effectiveness of the Completeness Theorem for an Intermediate Logic
    Hajime Ishihara (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Tatsunokuchi, Ishikawa, 923-12 Japan)
    Bakhadyr Khoussainov (The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA)
    Abstract: We investigate effectiveness of the completeness result for the logic with the Weak Law of Excluded Middle. Keywords: computability, Kripke models, completeness, jump operator, intermediate logics. Category: F.1 F.4
    Proceedings of the First Japan-New Zealand Workshop on Logic in Computer Science, special issue editors D.S. Bridges, C.S. Calude, M.J. Dinneen and B. Khoussainov.
    Khoussainov acknowledges the support of Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) and of the University of Auckland Research Committee.

    18. Academic Ramblings
    very broad sense of the term. Nonetheless, this is a nice start fora completeness theorem, about which I will write more soon.
    http://www.cs.kun.nl/~jesseh/slides/
    Academic ramblings
    The following are slides for various talks I've given. Each is available as a pdf file unless otherwise noted.

    19. Completeness Theorem
    Translate this page Primo Precedente Successivo Ultimo Indice Testo. Diapositiva 11 di 13.
    http://www.dimi.uniud.it/~tasso/krbasic/sld011.htm
    Diapositiva 11 di 13

    20. Completeness Theorem
    completeness theorem. KB ß. KB ß. if and only if. By meansof FOL, we can automate the computation of entailements!!!!
    http://www.dimi.uniud.it/~tasso/krbasic/tsld011.htm
    Completeness theorem
      KB ß KB ß if and only if
      By means of FOL, we can automate the computation of entailements!!!!
    Diapositiva precedente Diapositiva successiva Torna alla prima diapositiva Visualizza versione grafica

    Page 1     1-20 of 78    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter