Universality of Tag Systems with P = 2
- 1 January 1964
- journal article
- Published by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) in Journal of the ACM
- Vol. 11 (1) , 15-20
- https://doi.org/10.1145/321203.321206
Abstract
By a simple direct construction it is shown that computations done by Turing machines can be duplicated by a very simple symbol manipulation process. The process is described by a simple form of Post canonical system with some very strong restrictions. This system is monogenic : each formula (string of symbols) of the system can be affected by one and only one production (rule of inference) to yield a unique result. Accordingly, if we begin with a single axiom (initial string) the system generates a simply ordered sequence of formulas, and this operation of a monogenic system brings to mind the idea of a machine. The Post canonical system is further restricted to the “Tag” variety, described briefly below. It was shown in [1] that Tag systems are equivalent to Turing machines. The proof in [1] is very complicated and uses lemmas concerned with a variety of two-tape nonwriting Turing machines. The proof here avoids these otherwise interesting machines and strengthens the main result; obtaining the theorem with a best possible deletion number P = 2. Also, the representation of the Turing machine in the present system has a lower degree of exponentiation, which may be of significance in applications. These systems seem to be of value in establishing unsolvability of combinatorial problems.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Computability of Recursive FunctionsJournal of the ACM, 1963
- A Variant to Turing's Theory of Computing MachinesJournal of the ACM, 1957