In the year 1900 the German Mathematician David Hilbert gave a
curious address in Paris, at the meeting of the 2nd International
Congress of Mathematicians - he titled his address "Mathematical
Problems." In it, he emphasized the importance of taking on
challenging problems for maintaining the progress and development
of mathematics. The problems numbered 1, 2, and 10 which concern
mathematical logic and which gave birth to what is called the
entscheidungsproblem or the decision problem were eventually solved
though in the negative by Alonzo Church and Alan Turing in their
famous Church-Turing thesis. The later Turing and Gumanski's
attempts are criticized as inadequate or doubtful. So the decision
problem is still unsolved in the positive. This book provides a
positive solution using what the author calls the General Theory of
Effectively Provable Function (GEP). Tremendous insights on
computer development and evolution also come to light in this
research. Obviously, this book is an audacious attempt to solve a
problem that has lasted for more than a century and defied the best
minds of logic's greatest era
General
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