Degrees of formal systems
- 1 December 1958
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Symbolic Logic
- Vol. 23 (4) , 389-392
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2964013
Abstract
In this paper we answer some of the questions left open in [2]. We use the terminology of [2]. In particular, a theory will be a formal system formulated within the first-order calculus with identity. A theory is identified with the set of Gödel numbers of the theorems of the theory. Thus Craig's theorem [1] asserts that a theory is axiomatizable if and only if it is recursively enumerable.In [2], Feferman showed that if A is any recursively enumerable set, then there is an axiomatizable theory T having the same degree of unsolvability as A. (This result was proved independently by D. B. Mumford.) We show in Theorem 2 that if A is not recursive, then T may be chosen essentially undecidable. This depends on Theorem 1, which is a result on recursively enumerable sets of some independent interest.Our second result, given in Theorem 3, gives sufficient conditions for a theory to be creative. These conditions are more general than those given by Feferman. In particular, they show that the system of Kreisel described in [2] is creative.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Introduction to Metamathematics. By S. C. Kleene. Pp. x, 550, Fl. 32.50. 1952. (Noordhoff, Groningen; North-Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam)The Mathematical Gazette, 1954
- Undecidability of some simple formalized theoriesFundamenta Mathematicae, 1953