Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Yes You Can Prove a Negative!
- 2 Bell’s Impossibility Theorem(s)
- 3 Enjoying Bell Magic: With Inequalities and Without
- 4 Arrow’s (and Friends’) Impossibility Theorems
- 5 Clustering and Impossibility
- 6 A Gödel-ish Impossibility and Incompleteness Theorem
- 7 Turing Undecidability and Incompleteness
- 8 Even More Devastating: Chaitin’s Incompleteness Theorem
- 9 Gödel (For Real, This Time)
- Appendix Computer Programs Are Text
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - Even More Devastating: Chaitin’s Incompleteness Theorem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Yes You Can Prove a Negative!
- 2 Bell’s Impossibility Theorem(s)
- 3 Enjoying Bell Magic: With Inequalities and Without
- 4 Arrow’s (and Friends’) Impossibility Theorems
- 5 Clustering and Impossibility
- 6 A Gödel-ish Impossibility and Incompleteness Theorem
- 7 Turing Undecidability and Incompleteness
- 8 Even More Devastating: Chaitin’s Incompleteness Theorem
- 9 Gödel (For Real, This Time)
- Appendix Computer Programs Are Text
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In mathematics, it simply is not true that “you can’t prove a negative.” Many revolutionary impossibility theorems reveal profound properties of logic, computation, fairness, and the universe and form the mathematical background of new technologies and Nobel prizes. But to fully appreciate these theorems and their impact on mathematics and beyond, you must understand their proofs.
This book is the first to present complete proofs of these theorems for a broad, lay audience. It fully develops the simplest rigorous proofs found in the literature, reworked to contain less jargon and notation, and more background, intuition, examples, explanations, and exercises. Amazingly, all of the proofs in this book involve only arithmetic and basic logic – and are elementary, starting only from first principles and definitions.
Very little background knowledge is required, and no specialized mathematical training – all you need is the discipline to follow logical arguments and a pen in your hand.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Proven ImpossibleElementary Proofs of Profound Impossibility from Arrow, Bell, Chaitin, Gödel, Turing and More, pp. 174 - 189Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024