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This work is derived from the SERC "Logic for IT" Summer School Conference on Proof Theory held at Leeds University. The contributions come from acknowledged experts and comprise expository and research articles which form an invaluable introduction to proof theory aimed at both mathematicians and computer scientists.
Driven by the question, 'What is the computational content of a
(formal) proof?', this book studies fundamental interactions
between proof theory and computability. It provides a unique
self-contained text for advanced students and researchers in
mathematical logic and computer science. Part I covers basic proof
theory, computability and Godel's theorems. Part II studies and
classifies provable recursion in classical systems, from fragments
of Peano arithmetic up to PI11-CA0. Ordinal analysis and the
(Schwichtenberg-Wainer) subrecursive hierarchies play a central
role and are used in proving the 'modified finite Ramsey' and
'extended Kruskal' independence results for PA and PI11-CA0. Part
III develops the theoretical underpinnings of the first author's
proof assistant MINLOG. Three chapters cover higher-type
computability via information systems, a constructive theory TCF of
computable functionals, realizability, Dialectica interpretation,
computationally significant quantifiers and connectives and
polytime complexity in a two-sorted, higher-type arithmetic with
linear logic.
The lecture courses in this work are derived from the SERC 'Logic
for IT' Summer School and Conference on Proof Theory held at Leeds
University. The contributions come from acknowledged experts and
comprise expository and research articles; put together in this
book they form an invaluable introduction to proof theory that is
aimed at both mathematicians and computer scientists.
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