The theory presented in this book is developed constructively, is based on a few axioms encapsulating the notion of objects (points and sets) being apart, and encompasses both point-set topology and the theory of uniform spaces. While the classical-logic-based theory of proximity spaces provides some guidance for the theory of apartness, the notion of nearness/proximity does not embody enough algorithmic information for a deep constructive development. The use of constructive (intuitionistic) logic in this book requires much more technical ingenuity than one finds in classical proximity...
The theory presented in this book is developed constructively, is based on a few axioms encapsulating the notion of objects (points and sets) being...
Turing's famous 1936 paper introduced a formal definition of a computing machine, a Turing machine. This model led to both the development of actual computers and to computability theory, the study of what machines can and cannot compute. This book presents classical computability theory from Turing and Post to current results and methods, and their use in studying the information content of algebraic structures, models, and their relation to Peano arithmetic. The author presents the subject as an art to be practiced, and an art in the aesthetic sense of inherent beauty which all...
Turing's famous 1936 paper introduced a formal definition of a computing machine, a Turing machine. This model led to both the development of actua...
This book offers a self-contained exposition of the theory of computability in a higher-order context, where 'computable operations' may themselves be passed as arguments to other computable operations. The subject originated in the 1950s with the work of Kleene, Kreisel and others, and has since expanded in many different directions under the influence of workers from both mathematical logic and computer science. The ideas of higher-order computability have proved valuable both for elucidating the constructive content of logical systems, and for investigating the expressive power of...
This book offers a self-contained exposition of the theory of computability in a higher-order context, where 'computable operations' may themselves...
This book questions the relevance of computation to the physical universe. Our theories deliver computational descriptions, but the gaps and discontinuities in our grasp suggest a need for continued discourse between researchers from different disciplines, and this book is unique in its focus on the mathematical theory of incomputability and its relevance for the real world. The core of the book consists of thirteen chapters in five parts on extended models of computation; the search for natural examples of incomputable objects; mind, matter, and computation; the nature of information,...
This book questions the relevance of computation to the physical universe. Our theories deliver computational descriptions, but the gaps and discon...
Exploring the theory of computability and complexity over the real numbers, this book provides a systematic, technical development of "algorithmic randomness" and complexity for scientists working in diverse fields concerned with theoretical computer science.
Exploring the theory of computability and complexity over the real numbers, this book provides a systematic, technical development of "algorithmic ran...