Complete? At infinity? That means it never is, yes?The logic for determining this is that a Gödel alphabet can expand infinitely until it attains completeness — Shawn
What is a theorem's complexity? — tim wood
Complete? At infinity? That means it never is, yes? — tim wood
He did write an article titled, "On the Length of Proofs," the gist of which is that by adding axioms 1) unprovable theorems may become provable, and 2) many long proofs may be shortened. — tim wood
whether it is necessary for determining a theorems complexity, whether it would be needed it to be proven true that it is complete. — Shawn
[the complexity of a theorem is] the number of steps to determine a Q.E.D. result for a Turing machine. — Shawn
What do you mean by a theorem being complete? — TonesInDeepFreeze
What do you mean by "determine a QED result for a Turing machine"? — TonesInDeepFreeze
There aren't many to talk if any, and Godel's Incompleteness theorems apply retroactively, to all that have denumerable and countable alphabets. However, some uncountable alphabets exist, which leaves open the possibility that a theorem may be complete, yet possibly incomprehensible. — Shawn
which leaves open the possibility that a theorem may be complete, yet possibly incomprehensible. — Shawn
You are not talking about deriving the proof of a math theorem, you are asking that if I were to conjecture a theorem, then prove it, and then put my proof into some sort of computer algorithm - which is just another way of writing it out - is there a way to determine the "complexity" of my proof by examining the algorithm? Is this what you mean? — jgill
Are you saying a theorem is complete if it has been proven? — jgill
What do others think? Does this make things sounds somewhat disorganized in how proofs are written? — Shawn
Is it possible for you to focus your subject? Can you perhaps give a specific example of what you're getting at? — fishfry
a theorem cannot both be consistent and complete, according to Gödel's Incompleteness theorems? — Shawn
A theorem can neither be consistent nor complete not by virtue of Gödel, but rather by virtue of the fact that the terms consistency and completeness apply to axiomatic systems and NOT to theorems. You seem unclear on this point. — fishfry
Please forgive my lack of knowledge on the matter; but, what I wanted to say that a theorems proof for an axiomatic system in math is unable to be ascertained in complexity with regards to being neither complete and consistent. — Shawn
With this fact being true, — Shawn
then how does one ever hope to gauge a mathematical theorem's proof as measurably complex or less complex. — Shawn
This sentence repeats the same misunderstanding. Individual theorems do not have the consistency or completeness attributes, in the same sense that automobile tires don't have the horsepower attribute. — fishfry
But completeness and consistency of axiomatic systems seem to have little or nothing to do with your question. If a theorem has a proof and you want to find the simplest one, that has nothing to do with the axiomatic system being incomplete. The axiom of choice has no proof in ZF so it's meaningless to ask about the simplest proof. And if a system is inconsistent, then everything has a one-line proof following directly from the inconsistency. So completeness and consistency are irrelevant to your question. — fishfry
What I'm trying to determine is whether there is any possibility to determine the complexity of proofs by reasoning that a Q.E.D. would occur at the least exhaustive method of determining it. Does that make sense? Following with this logic, if you don't have a method of doing this, then how can you determine complexity in mathematical proofs? — Shawn
May I try? Is it a fair translation to say that you're interested in the length of proofs and determining when a given proof is the shortest? — tim wood
As to determining complexity itself, that measure is pre-given, yes? — tim wood
E.g., as the count of the symbols in the proof? In any case you cannot measure anything without first having established a method of measuring and quantifying it, yes? — tim wood
How long is this stick? Oh, by the way, no means or methods of measuring allowed. — tim wood
Yeah, and that's not even counterintuitive, until I bring into the discussion completeness and consistency of a theorem, which seemingly, as I view it, are needed to determine the shortest length of a proof to determine the complexity of it. And, brute forcing the result of the shortest Q.E.D. is not really that interesting to talk about. — Shawn
completeness [,,,] of a theorem — Shawn
Are you asking whether L(P) is computable? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm asking if n [...] is determine in length given P — Shawn
I'm asking if n or m<n is determine in shortest Turing Computable length given P — Shawn
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