Proofs without syntax
- 1 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Annals of Mathematics in Annals of Mathematics
- Vol. 164 (3) , 1065-1076
- https://doi.org/10.4007/annals.2006.164.1065
Abstract
"[M]athematicians care no more for logic than logicians for mathematics." Augustus de Morgan, 1868. Proofs are traditionally syntactic, inductively generated objects. This paper presents an abstract mathematical formulation of propositional calculus (propositional logic) in which proofs are combinatorial (graph-theoretic), rather than syntactic. It defines a *combinatorial proof* of a proposition P as a graph homomorphism h : C -> G(P), where G(P) is a graph associated with P and C is a coloured graph. The main theorem is soundness and completeness: P is true iff there exists a combinatorial proof h : C -> G(P).Keywords
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