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This is a thoroughly revised and enlarged second edition that
presents the main results of descriptive complexity theory, that
is, the connections between axiomatizability of classes of finite
structures and their complexity with respect to time and space
bounds. The logics that are important in this context include
fixed-point logics, transitive closure logics, and also certain
infinitary languages; their model theory is studied in full detail.
The book is written in such a way that the respective parts on
model theory and descriptive complexity theory may be read
independently.
This introduction to first-order logic clearly works out the role
of first-order logic in the foundations of mathematics,
particularly the two basic questions of the range of the axiomatic
method and of theorem-proving by machines. It covers several
advanced topics not commonly treated in introductory texts, such as
Fraisse's characterization of elementary equivalence, Lindstroem's
theorem on the maximality of first-order logic, and the
fundamentals of logic programming.
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Computer Science Logic - 13th International Workshop, CSL'99, 8th Annual Conference of the EACSL, Madrid, Spain, September 20-25, 1999, Proceedings (Paperback, 1999 ed.)
Joerg Flum, Mario Rodriguez- Artalejo
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R1,740
Discovery Miles 17 400
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The 1999 Annual Conference of the European Association for Computer
Science Logic, CSL'99, was held in Madrid, Spain, on September
20-25, 1999. CSL'99 was the 13th in a series of annual meetings,
originally intended as Internat- nal Workshops on Computer Science
Logic, and the 8th to be held as the - nual Conference of the
EACSL. The conference was organized by the Computer Science
Departments (DSIP and DACYA) at Universidad Complutense in M- rid
(UCM). The CSL'99 program committee selected 34 of 91 submitted
papers for p- sentation at the conference and publication in this
proceedings volume. Each submitted paper was refereed by at least
two, and in almost all cases, three di erent referees. The second
refereeing round, previously required before a - per was accepted
for publication in the proceedings, was dropped following a
decision taken by the EACSL membership meeting held during CSL'98
(Brno, Czech Republic, August 25, 1998).
Was ist ein mathematischer Beweis? Wie lassen sich Beweise
rechtfertigen? Gibt es Grenzen der Beweisbarkeit? Ist die
Mathematik widerspruchsfrei? Kann man das Auffinden mathematischer
Beweise Computern ubertragen? Erst im 20. Jahrhundert ist es der
mathematischen Logik gelungen, weitreichende Antworten auf diese
Fragen zu geben: Im vorliegenden Werk werden die Ergebnisse
systematisch zusammengestellt; im Mittelpunkt steht dabei die Logik
erster Stufe. Die Lekture setzt - ausser einer gewissen
Vertrautheit mit der mathematischen Denkweise - keine spezifischen
Kenntnisse voraus. In der vorliegenden 5. Auflage finden sich
erstmals Loesungsskizzen zu den Aufgaben.
This introduction to first-order logic clearly works out the role
of first-order logic in the foundations of mathematics,
particularly the two basic questions of the range of the axiomatic
method and of theorem-proving by machines. It covers several
advanced topics not commonly treated in introductory texts, such as
Fraisse's characterization of elementary equivalence, Lindstroem's
theorem on the maximality of first-order logic, and the
fundamentals of logic programming.
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