The Second Incompleteness Theorem
Our aim in the previous section was to present Gödel's first incompleteness theorem in the context of recursion theory. Much as this “modern” approach is valuable for showing the links between unprovability and uncomputability, it has obscured the simplicity of Gödel's ingenious idea (as i...
Saved in:
Published in | Lectures in Logic and Set Theory pp. 205 - 318 |
---|---|
Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
09.01.2003
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 0521168465 9780521753739 0521753732 9780521168465 |
DOI | 10.1017/CBO9780511615559.003 |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | Our aim in the previous section was to present Gödel's first incompleteness theorem in the context of recursion theory. Much as this “modern” approach is valuable for showing the links between unprovability and uncomputability, it has obscured the simplicity of Gödel's ingenious idea (as it was carried out in his original paper (1931)).What he had accomplished in that paper, through arithmetization of formulas and proofs, was to build a sentence of arithmetic, ℱ, that said “I am not a theorem”. One can easily prove, metamathematically, that such an ℱ is undecidable, if arithmetic is ω-consistent.To see this at the intuitive level, let us replace ω-consistency by correctness. Then surely ℱ is not provable, for if it is, then it is a theorem, and hence false (contradicting correctness).On the other hand, we have just concluded that ℱ is true! Hence, ¬ℱ is false, and therefore not provable either (by correctness).This simple application of the “liar's paradox” is at the heart of the first incompleteness theorem.Imagine now that the arithmetization is actually carried out within (some) formal arithmetic, and that with some effort we have managed to embed into formal arithmetic the metamathematical argument that leads to the assertion “if arithmetic is consistent, then ⊬ ℱ”. The quoted statement is formalized by “Con → ℱ”, where “Con” is some (formal) sentence that says that arithmetic is consistent. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Our aim in the previous section was to present Gödel's first incompleteness theorem in the context of recursion theory. Much as this “modern” approach is valuable for showing the links between unprovability and uncomputability, it has obscured the simplicity of Gödel's ingenious idea (as it was carried out in his original paper (1931)).What he had accomplished in that paper, through arithmetization of formulas and proofs, was to build a sentence of arithmetic, ℱ, that said “I am not a theorem”. One can easily prove, metamathematically, that such an ℱ is undecidable, if arithmetic is ω-consistent.To see this at the intuitive level, let us replace ω-consistency by correctness. Then surely ℱ is not provable, for if it is, then it is a theorem, and hence false (contradicting correctness).On the other hand, we have just concluded that ℱ is true! Hence, ¬ℱ is false, and therefore not provable either (by correctness).This simple application of the “liar's paradox” is at the heart of the first incompleteness theorem.Imagine now that the arithmetization is actually carried out within (some) formal arithmetic, and that with some effort we have managed to embed into formal arithmetic the metamathematical argument that leads to the assertion “if arithmetic is consistent, then ⊬ ℱ”. The quoted statement is formalized by “Con → ℱ”, where “Con” is some (formal) sentence that says that arithmetic is consistent. |
Author | Tourlakis, George |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: George surname: Tourlakis fullname: Tourlakis, George organization: York University, Toronto |
BookMark | eNqNj81OwzAQhI0ACVryBhzCA6TsOt7EFqcQFahUqQfKOfJf-EtsVHPg8YmAS-HCXkazq_1GM2NHIQbP2DnCAgHry_Z6o2oJhFghEakFQHnAsr3dIZsB8clJUdEJy1J6gWlQgaTylF1sn3x-720MLl8FG8e3wb_74FPKp0vc-fGMHfd6SD770Tl7uFlu27tivbldtc26sIhQF0YqUKLqjfCo-pKbSmjnOJLWXDpFBozQXFvQRDV3lUOpNQkveyUnU5dz1nxzrR7N7tk9-s5O-SbG19TtVeo-xqH73b2BL8bVH4aJ__3-BNO2XBY |
ContentType | Book Chapter |
Copyright | George Tourlakis 2003 |
Copyright_xml | – notice: George Tourlakis 2003 |
DOI | 10.1017/CBO9780511615559.003 |
DatabaseTitleList | |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Mathematics |
EISBN | 9780511615559 0511615558 |
EndPage | 318 |
ExternalDocumentID | 9780511615559_xml_CBO9780511615559A017 |
GroupedDBID | -G2 -VQ -VX 089 38. A4I A4J AAAAZ AABBV AAHFW ABARN ABESS ABIAV ABMRC ABZUC ACCTN ACLGV ACNOG AD0 ADCGF ADQZK ADVEM AEDFS AERYV AEWAL AEWQY AGSJN AHAWV AIAQS AJFER AJXXZ AKHYG ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMJDZ ANGWU ASYWF AYSPE AZZ BBABE BFIBU BJUTA BPBUR COBLI COXPH CYGLA CZZ DUGUG EBSCA EBZNK ECOWB FH2 FVPQW GEOUK HF4 ICERG IWG JJU MYL NK1 NK2 OLDIN OTBUH OZASK OZBHS PQQKQ S36 SACVX SUPCW XI1 ZXKUE |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c1107-b890946fb4e19f32b64add215aa28d95b0b4a2ac0a5572d6d18aa54e8f986d173 |
ISBN | 0521168465 9780521753739 0521753732 9780521168465 |
IngestDate | Fri Feb 21 02:33:49 EST 2025 Wed Mar 12 03:53:17 EDT 2025 |
IsPeerReviewed | false |
IsScholarly | false |
Language | English |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1107-b890946fb4e19f32b64add215aa28d95b0b4a2ac0a5572d6d18aa54e8f986d173 |
PageCount | 114 |
ParticipantIDs | cambridge_corebooks_9780511615559_xml_CBO9780511615559A017 cambridge_cbo_9780511615559_xml_CBO9780511615559A017 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 20030109 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2003-01-09 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 01 year: 2003 text: 20030109 day: 09 |
PublicationDecade | 2000 |
PublicationTitle | Lectures in Logic and Set Theory |
PublicationYear | 2003 |
SSID | ssj0000190853 ssib035221502 |
Score | 1.263592 |
Snippet | Our aim in the previous section was to present Gödel's first incompleteness theorem in the context of recursion theory. Much as this “modern” approach is... |
SourceID | cambridge |
SourceType | Publisher |
StartPage | 205 |
Title | The Second Incompleteness Theorem |
URI | http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511615559.003 https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511615559.003?locatt=mode:legacy |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3LS8MwGA9uXnwcfOJ8UcFrtUmTNvGmYzKE6WEb7DaSPkDUDVwF8a_3S5r1MXeYu5QmbZJ-_YV8j-b3FaHrkLNA-DFxsVC-CxovdkELgs8jmcQyVjwwDLnec9Ad0qcRG5V5iA27JFM30c9SXsk6qEId4KpZsv9AtugUKuAc8IUjIAzHBeO3HmbN2ct59N_sZ9V_TM7zrvaTrOTb2_ixpqy9vVZC4IvzpK-9Yr0t2Gww12a0Xv9MN3bIeVzAN3EBUXMPNTEX3JEwTxc0X6I8VtF2fr76_VlI8-xL7YcX0w02ny-ZTu3pl4qj2M5Xu2f8_fE-Xmx4D_01UCPktIk2QeF2ipCKNgDBKCVFYEyT28GGsLxiHICBxGzByEJs2qTKxd2arHOCJA5vlz1_NYlGxZQY7KEdTS9xNO8DhNtHG8nkAG33iuy5s0N0BW_eyTFx6pg4FpMjNHzsDNpd1_7Kwo20g-0qLsCPDlJFEyxSn6iAgmIBwaUkPBZMeYpKIiNPMhaSOIgxl5LRhKeCQyH0j1FzMp0kJ8hhOE1wQknEZEpBbXIWCiyJl0ZKKCq8FqKFfONITcerodNCd5VmIIqe2LMVG5-uN-YZ2ipn7jlqZp9fyQXYeJm6tLPkF-GTOB4 |
linkProvider | ProQuest Ebooks |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=bookitem&rft.title=Lectures+in+Logic+and+Set+Theory&rft.au=Tourlakis%2C+George&rft.atitle=The+Second+Incompleteness+Theorem&rft.date=2003-01-09&rft.isbn=9780521753739&rft.spage=205&rft.epage=318&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FCBO9780511615559.003&rft.externalDocID=9780511615559_xml_CBO9780511615559A017 |
thumbnail_m | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/image/custom?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.cambridge.org%2F97805211%2F68465%2Fcover%2F9780521168465.jpg |