The Blind Spot

Lectures on Logic

537 pages

English language

Published 2011 by European Mathematical Society.

ISBN:
978-3-03719-088-3
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OCLC Number:
757486610

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These lectures on logic, more specifically proof theory, are basically intended for postgraduate students and researchers in logic. The question at stake is the nature of mathematical knowledge and the difference between a question and an answer, i.e., the implicit and the explicit. The problem is delicate mathematically and philosophically as well: the relation between a question and its answer is a sort of equality where one side is "more equal than the other": one thus discovers essentialist blind spots. Starting with Gödel's paradox (1931)--so to speak, the incompleteness of answers with respect to questions--the book proceeds with paradigms inherited from Gentzen's cut-elimination (1935). Various settings are studied: sequent calculus, natural deduction, lambda calculi, category-theoretic composition, up to geometry of interaction (GoI), all devoted to explicitation, which eventually amounts to inverting an operator in a von Neumann algebra. Mathematical language is usually described as referring to a preexisting reality. Logical …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Proof theory
  • Mathematical Logic
  • Mathematics
  • Operator Algebras
  • Computation
  • Algorithmic Complexity Theory