As far as I can guess, you are asking what I already mentioned:
Given P, is "What is the length of the shortest proof of P?" computable? — TonesInDeepFreeze
As far as I can guess, you are asking what I already mentioned:
Given P, is "What is the length of the shortest proof of P?" computable?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Well, yes. I'm concerned with complexity of a theorems proof — Shawn
Well, yes. I'm concerned with complexity of a theorems proof or what I think is how you can gauge complexity in mathematics, through determining how simple the proof is for any theorem. — Shawn
So, when I say that a proof of a theorem is subject to not being able to determine its complexity does that mean anything? — Shawn
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. — Shawn
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
And by 'complexity' do you mean 'the sum of the lengths of the formulas in the proof'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm thinking again of having proven a theorem, putting into a computer algorithm, then counting symbols to ascertain "complexity." I guess that would be some sort of definition, but why one would wish to do that is not clear to me. I suppose one could say, "Oh, Gill's proof of Theorem X has complexity 32, whereas Kojita's proof has complexity 56." Then what? — jgill
Nothing at all hard about the conjectures or the theorems. Be good if you payed attention to the words. It would appear you're getting your "completeness" from problems that are considered NP-complete. There are many Youtube videos on NP-completness, for almost every level of student. Give some a try .Mathematicians often talk about a theorem or conjecture being qualitatively "hard" — Shawn
What do you mean by the complexity of a proof? I've already suggested that it could be defined as the length of a proof in some formal proof system. What do you mean by it? — fishfry
What is a QED? Do you mean a proof? — fishfry
I've already suggested a way. I don't know that it's regarded as particularly important but I could be wrong about that. For sure it's important in computer science, and I pointed you to complexity theory. — fishfry
I don't see how this sort of knowledge would help prove a theorem — jgill
Interesting ideas, but to my mind it's putting the cart before the horse. I don't see how this sort of knowledge would help prove a theorem, which is the essence of mathematics — jgill
Nothing at all hard about the conjectures or the theorems. Be good if you payed attention to the words. It would appear you're getting your "completeness" from problems that are considered NP-complete. There are many Youtube videos on NP-completness, for almost every level of student. Give some a try . — tim wood
What is the complexity class of such an algorithm?
I don't know. And I'm not very much informed on complexity classes. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't know. And I'm very much informed on complexity classes.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
There was an attempt at doing this by Russell and Whitehead in the Principia, where they utilized type theory extensively, to no avail. — Shawn
If my attempt was correct, and there are only finitely many symbols in the signature, then, if I'm not mistaken, there is an algorithm to list the theorems in order of proof length (and, say, lexicographically within length). — TonesInDeepFreeze
PM addressed complexity classes? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Set-theory can't do this — Shawn
What does "this" refer to there? Set theory can't do a lot of things, but what is it in particular are you saying set theory can't do? — TonesInDeepFreeze
PM addressed complexity classes?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's my estimate. — Shawn
How do you make it both syntactic and semantical within a formal system to ascertain the Turing complexity of the task — Shawn
What does "this" refer to there? Set theory can't do a lot of things, but what is it in particular are you saying set theory can't do?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Sorry, I was thinking about it dialectically with regards to type theory, which I explained my thoughts about above in the post above. — Shawn
Are you deliberately wasting people's time with remarks you've intentionally prepared to be gibberish or are so personally esoteric that no one but you could know what you mean? — TonesInDeepFreeze
If my previous post is correct, then I take it that your full question is:
What is the complexity class of such an algorithm?
I don't know. And I'm not very much informed on complexity classes. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I find it interesting as a mathematical question onto itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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