Computability theory
Computability theory is part of computer science . Scientists want to know what can be computed, and what can not.
There is a model of a computer that is used for this. It is called the Turing machine . A Turing machine basically is a special typewriter with an endless ribbon . The machine is named after the mathematician Alan Turing .
A problem is computable if it can be expressed in such a way that a Turing machine can solve it.
One of the best known examples is the Halting problem . The task is to write a program which says for all programs whether they will finally stop. This is impossible to decide. Mathematicians say the problem is undecidable .
General Theorems (list) & Paradoxes Logics
Traditional Propositional Predicate
First-order
Second-order
Higher-order
Free
Quantifiers
Predicate
Monadic predicate calculus
Set theory
Types of Sets
Countable
Uncountable
Empty
Inhabited
Singleton
Finite
Infinite
Transitive
Ultrafilter
Recursive
Fuzzy
Universal
Universe
Constructible
Grothendieck
Von Neumann
Maps & Cardinality Set theories
Zermelo–Fraenkel
General
Kripke–Platek
Morse–Kelley
Naive
New Foundations
Tarski–Grothendieck
Von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel
Ackermann
Constructive
Formal systems (list),Language & Syntax
Alphabet
Arity
Automata
Axiom schema
Expression
Extension
by definition
Conservative
Relation
Formation rule
Grammar
Formula
Atomic
Closed
Ground
Open
Free/bound variable
Language
Metalanguage
Logical connective
Predicate
Functional
Variable
Propositional variable
Proof
Quantifier
Sentence
Signature
String
Substitution
Symbol
Function
Logical/Constant
Non-logical
Variable
Term
Theory
Example axiomatic systems (list)
of geometry:
Euclidean :
non-Euclidean * of arithmetic:
Peano
second-order
elementary function
primitive recursive
Robinson
Skolem
of the real numbers
of Boolean algebras
Proof theory Model theory
Truth value
Interpretation
Model
Equivalence
Finite
Saturated
Spectrum
Submodel
Non-standard model
Diagram
Categorical theory
Model complete theory
Satisfiability
Semantics of logic
Strength
Theories of truth
Semantic
Tarski's
Kripke's
T-schema
Transfer principle
Truth predicate
Type
Ultraproduct
Validity
Computability theory Related
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