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Gödel's Proof

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In 1931 Kurt Gödel published his fundamental paper, "On Formally Undecidable Propositions of Principia Mathematica and Related Systems." This revolutionary paper challenged certain basic assumptions underlying much research in mathematics and logic. Gödel received public recognition of his work in 1951 when he was awarded the first Albert Einstein Award for achievement in the natural sciences--perhaps the highest award of its kind in the United States. The award committee described his work in mathematical logic as "one of the greatest contributions to the sciences in recent times."

However, few mathematicians of the time were equipped to understand the young scholar's complex proof. Ernest Nagel and James Newman provide a readable and accessible explanation to both scholars and non-specialists of the main ideas and broad implications of Gödel's discovery. It offers every educated person with a taste for logic and philosophy the chance to understand a previously difficult and inaccessible subject.

New York University Press is proud to publish this special edition of one of its bestselling books. With a new introduction by Douglas R. Hofstadter, this book will appeal to students, scholars, and professionals in the fields of mathematics, computer science, logic and philosophy, and science.

125 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1958

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 355 reviews
Profile Image for WarpDrive.
274 reviews493 followers
October 25, 2021
Highly entertaining and thoroughly compelling, this little gem represents a semi-technical but comprehensive and mathematically accurate elucidation of the famous (and so often misused and misunderstood) Godel's meta-mathematical results concerning the limits of provability in formal axiomatic theories.

Being relatively short, this book does not expand on the important correspondences and similarities with the concepts of computability originally introduced by Turing (in theory of computability, particularly in the theory of recursive functions, there is a fundamental theorem stating that there are semi-decidable sets (sets which can be effectively generated), that are not fully decidable. In fact, this is nothing but the Godel's first theorem expressed in computational terms. As expressed beautifully by Chaitin, uncomputability is the deeper reason for incompleteness).
Moreover, there are a couple of areas where there is really a bit of too much hand-waving (for example, I would have loved a much more detailed treatment of the critical “Correspondence Lemma”, and of fundamental concepts such as that of “model” of a theory), but I must say that this book achieves the remarkable result of condensing the core of Godel's theorems in a succinct but very readable, approachable, meaningful and informative way, even including important technical details that allow the user to get a better understanding than what normally offered by most other semi-technical books on the subject.

The reader can get, for example, a quite good appreciation of the genius of Godel's approach, who understood that mathematics is a universal medium for the embedding of patterns or structure of any sort, so that statements seemingly about numbers alone can in fact encode statements about other universes of discourse, including meta-mathematics itself.
Godel managed thus to achieve what the authors call the “arithmetization of meta-mathematics” whereby a meta-mathematical statement about formal expressions, and their typographical relations to one another, may be construed as a mathematical statement about the corresponding Godel numbers and their arithmetical relations to one another: meta-mathematics is therefore faithfully mapped into the domain of integers and their properties. And it is precisely by using this fundamental result that Godel could demonstrate his celebrated theorems.

Godel's incompleteness theorems are about formal provability in a finitistic sense within a specific class of formal systems, rather than about "provability" in an informal sense, or even about provability in mathematics in general.
Moreover, while there are several global properties that a formal system may have (such as completeness, consistency, and the existence of an effective axiomatization), the incompleteness theorems only show that systems which contain a “sufficient amount of arithmetic” cannot possess all three of these properties at the same time. In particular, it is important to highlight that, far from stating that every system is or will be found inconsistent, Godel’s incompleteness theorems merely place limits on what consistent systems can prove (including the intriguing matter of their own consistency, of course).

I want here to digress a little from the specific contents of this book, and I want to take the opportunity to dispel at least a couple of the many misconceptions about Godel's theorems: the idea that Godel's theorems imply that there are mathematical truths that are not “reachable”, or that it is likely that an inconsistency will be found within the most widely adopted current formal systems, or the preposterous concept that Godel's theorems imply significant deficiencies in the epistemological power of mathematics:
- firstly, the most “popular” formal systems (such as ZFC and PA - the former being the Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with Axiom of Choice, the latter referring to Peano Arithmetic), are "effectively generated" (that is, their set of theorems is a “recursively enumerable” sets, which means that there exists a computer program that could enumerate all the theorems of the system without listing any statements that are not theorems). This implies that all theorems of formal systems such as ZFC and PA are “reachable”, in a sense, even if not necessarily in a finite amount of time. Given a formal system such as PA or ZFC, the relationship between the axioms and the theorems of the theory is perfectly mechanical and deterministic, and in theory recursively enumerable by a computer program. Actually, this is one of the pre-requisites for the applicability of Godel's incompleteness theorems
- secondly, the Godel incompleteness theorems must also be put in their correct overall context: while any post-modernism-bent reader can mention Godel's incompleteness theorems (with more or less accuracy), not many are aware of the important Gentzen's proof of consistency of formal systems such as PA, achieved using the (admittedly non finitistic, therefore not satisfying Hilbert's original stipulation of his aims) principle of transfinite induction. Metamathematical arguments establishing the consistency of formal systems such as ZFC have been devised not just by Gentzen, but also by other researchers. For example, we can prove the consistency of ZFC by assuming that there is an inaccessible cardinal. But, of course, Godel's theorems imply that this can't be turned into a proof inside ZFC itself, because ZFC can't prove the hypothesis that there is an inaccessible cardinal. In general terms, we can't prove the consistency of any sufficiently powerful given formal system from within such system.
- thirdly, not many are aware of the Godel's completeness theorem. This important result states that any (first-order) theorem which is true in all models of a theory must be logically deducible from that theory, and vice versa (for example, in abstract algebra any result which is true for all groups, must be deducible from the group axioms).
- last but not least: the ultimate confirmation that formal systems such as ZFC provide a consistent and normally sufficiently powerful formal system able to generate adequate mathematical structures for the satisfactory representation of the patterns ultimately characterizing the physical world, is available in the very experimental results of the physical sciences, as famously condensed by Wigner in his treatise about the “unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics”. This is, of course, not an absolute apriori proof of consistency, as originally dreamt by Hilbert, but it is quite an important consideration that should not be forgotten either.
- we should also bear in mind that nothing prevents from adding more axioms and enriching a theory so to represent an ever-increasing set of mathematical truths. This is actually what happened historically, when more sophisticated theories such as ZFC developed out of the naive set theories initially proposed by set theorists. The fact that there are number-theoretical truths which can not be formally demonstrated within a single given formal system (in other words, you can't put all mathematical truths in one single formal axiomatic system), does NOT mean that there are truths which are forever incapable of becoming known, or that some sort of mystic human intuition must replace cogent, rigorous proof. And we should also bear in mind that, realistically speaking, it is safe to say that 99% of contemporary mathematics follows from a small, stable subset of ZFC

Considering all the above, it is my strong view that, rather than proving any supposed epistemological limitations of mathematics, Godel's theorems actually clearly highlight the infinite, inexhaustible richness of the patterns, structures and truths that mathematics can offer – structures and patterns that are also reflected in, and can faithfully represent, the inner core of physical reality. Mathematics is, informationally speaking, infinitely powerful - it can't be compressed into a limited, finite set of axioms from which all the mathematical truths can be derived.

Anyway, going back to this remarkable book, I think that it is one of the best not-fully-technical available treatments of these seminal theorems: it is very highly recommended to any reader provided with some basic background knowledge of logic and set theory, and willing to explore these theorems to some good level of detail. It is not complete and a bit dated in parts, but an excellent treatise nevertheless, fully deserving a 5-star rating.
Profile Image for Riku Sayuj.
658 reviews7,594 followers
November 30, 2014
This Statement is False.

How can anyone wrap oneself around that ancient paradox? A true statement whose unprovability resulted precisely from its truth!

With this self-undermining formula as his hammer, Godel knocked down the fortress of Principia Mathematica (PM), so painstakingly constructed by Russell and Whitehead.

He also showed that his method applied to any system whatsoever that tried to accomplish the goals of Principia Mathematica. In effect, then, Godel destroyed the hopes of those who believed that mathematical thinking is capturable by the rigidity of axiomatic systems, and thus were mathematicians, logicians, and philosophers pushed headlong into a mysterious newly found chasm irrevocably separating “provability” from “truth”.

The Heart of Godel’s Argument: The Formal K.O.

(i) Godel constructed a formula G of PM that represents the meta-mathematical statement: ‘The formula G is not demonstrable using the rules of PM’.
— This formula thus ostensibly says of itself that it is not demonstrable.

(ii) Godel also showed that G is demonstrable if, and only if, its formal negation (not) G is demonstrable.

However, if a formula and its own negation are both formally demonstrable, then PM is not consistent. Accordingly, if PM is consistent, neither G nor (not) G can be formally derivable from the axioms. In short, if PM is consistent, then G is a formally undecidable formula.

(iii) Godel showed that though G is not formally demonstrable, it nevertheless is a true arithmetical formula.

(iv) Since G is both true and formally undecidable (within PM), PM must be incomplete. In other words, we cannot deduce all arithmetical truths from the axioms and rules of PM.

We are thus compelled to recognize a fundamental limitation concerning the power of formal axiomatic reasoning. For anyone inclined to believe that the essence of mathematics (or any other science) is purely formal axiomatic reasoning, this must come as a shocking revelation.

Godel’s paper is notoriously difficult. Forty-six preliminary definitions, together with several important preliminary propositions, must be mastered before the main results are reached. But, as we can see (I have tried to faithfully use phrasings from the book throughout this ‘review’), this superb presentation provides the lay reader with just enough material to get an idea about the central argument and its beauty.

Also, this is the book that inspired a teenaged Douglas R. Hofstadter to write his epic opus. For that alone, it is worth a read.
Profile Image for Matt.
189 reviews29 followers
May 26, 2009
I don't read much math these days, so when I do read it, it's a little like climbing a steep wall following a winter of sitting in front of a computer. You discover a lot of soreness in muscles you scarcely remember you ever had in the first place.

The long and the short of it is that once upon a time, I sorta understood Godel's incompleteness theorem, and after this modest reading, I sorta understand it again. Success!

More importantly for me, it was fun to try to connect neurons in my poor fuzzy brain, and for a math aficionado, entering a world where it's assumed that conclusions are merely the logical consequences of initial assumptions and nothing more is a bit like diving into mom's meatloaf -- familiar and comforting.

Godel's theorem itself is supposedly the big revelation that upset the 19th century mathematics apple cart. As the authors explain, his proof showed that "no final systematization of many important areas of mathematics is attainable," a potentially unsettling proposition. But it may be a somewhat comforting assertion. Who would want to have it all figured out anyway? And gravity still works, and the sun still comes up every day, so I think we'll all get by.

As for its readability, math forever has a big problem in that it's *designed* to simplify reason, so when it itself becomes very complex, it can be difficult to impart. By the same reasoning, if you try to simplify a very complex proof, leaving out a lot of the messy details while trying to explain the rest in plain English, you're necessarily going to miss a lot and there will be important details that are missing.

In this book, the concepts are simplified and the details are left out. On the plus side, it's pretty readable for a math book, and the main conclusions are pretty easy to follow. On the minus side, there will necessarily be points to question. They do have a lot of footnotes, which offers some middle ground.
Profile Image for Chayan.
24 reviews19 followers
March 20, 2017
How do I come up with a fair review for this book, without having my judgement clouded by the genius of Godel? On one hand I am speechless by the ingenuity of the proof devised by Godel and what it signifies, while on the other I am disappointed with the authors for how insufficiently the legend's mind has been probed and represented in these pages. For a book named Godel's Proof, this one barely scratches the surface.

On the plus side, it was a very involved and difficult topic, and it was a bold undertaking by the authors to present it in a form consumable by the layman. They painstakingly laid the groundwork, chapter by chapter, assuming no prior knowledge in mathematical logic on part of the reader. Before plunging into the crux of the Proof, the context is presented in an elaborated and easy to understand way. This part of the book is a priceless gem for any newbie to the discipline of formal logic in deductive systems. Laudable is also the mathematical rigor maintained throughout, despite the requirement of keeping it friendly and comprehensible.

On the negative, it barely met the expectations that I set out with. I sat through the earlier pages, consuming the wonderfully comprehensive background, only to find a fleeting glimpse at the actual proof. It is at best a superficial walk-through that doesn't even follow Godel's original line of reasoning.

Though disappointed, I guess I will solace my mind that this 'succinct' account of the theorems did somewhat prepare me to tackle the actual work of Godel ;)
Profile Image for Sam Ritchie.
20 reviews31 followers
November 12, 2015
Other reviews here do an excellent job of going over the book's subject matter. I'd encountered the proof before in "Gödel, Escher, Bach" - this book gives a really deep, clear dive into the main thrust of Gödel's proof that it's not possible to write an absolute proof of consistency for a formal system that can describe number theory inside that theory itself. (The book will teach you what everything in that phrase means, so don't be scared!)

Here's my more personal review.

I'm a functional programming guy that studied mechanical engineering. I've had exposure to a bunch of applied math, but pure math, and proof in particular, have always scared me. I've been trying to deal with this by reading about abstract algebra, category theory, working through blog posts and tutorials... none of this has really caught. I have better context for what it means to "study math", but I'm still nervous.

"Gödel's Proof" was one of the first books in my fall "Learn Math" program. All my "attempts" at getting into higher level math and proofs have failed due to skimming. It's hard to go deep into a result without context, of course, but it's also hard to rack up a list of dozens of definitions, try to wade through them on Wikipedia, and end up far from the original goal.

I was inspired by Cal Newport's pitch on the benefits of deep, methodical study of a small topic. As a computer science graduate student, he went out and bought an expensive lab notebook, and each week does a deep, deliberate reading of a single paper and lays out its conclusions in his own words in his notebook.

This book seemed a perfect place to start. The authors take a really difficult paper, expand the discussion out to a hundred pages or so, and provide all the context you need to wrap your head around the main arguments.

It took me a couple of days, but the process was immensely rewarding. My recommendation for this book is to take it slow, work through it with a notebook in hand, and try to restate the core conclusions of each chapter as you move through. Some areas I thought I'd understood before this book:

- What a "formal system" is
- What it means for a system to be "sufficiently powerful"
- What the hell the phrase "foundational crisis of mathematics" really means;
- How mechanical theorem provers work, and why it's a reasonable goal to try and write software that can assist with and verify proofs
- What phrases like "theorem", "proof", "demonstration", "decidable", "complete" etc really MEAN when discussing formal systems.

I read "The Little Prover" (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...) right before "Gödel's Proof". If you want some practice in using a language like Scheme to play with some of the concepts of formal proof, and try to implement a language like Principia Mathematica, I'd recommend cracking "Little Prover" next.

Overall a mindbending, self-contained book that delivers the goods if you take the time to read it over a few sessions.
Profile Image for Ali Reda.
Author 5 books210 followers
September 13, 2021
The Book is the best to explain Godel's Proof of the Incompleteness Theorem.

Gödel showed that Principia, or any other system within which arithmetic can be developed, is essentially incomplete. In other words, given any consistent set of arithmetical axioms, there are true arithmetical statements that cannot be derived from the set.

Godel showed that it is impossible to give a meta-mathematical proof of the consistency of a system comprehensive enough to contain the whole of arithmetic—unless the proof itself employs rules of inference in certain essential respects different from the Transformation Rules used in deriving theorems within the system. Such a proof may, to be sure, possess great value and importance. However, if the reasoning in it is based on rules of inference much more powerful than the rules of the arithmetical calculus, so that the consistency of the assumptions in the reasoning is as subject to doubt as is the consistency of arithmetic, the proof would yield only a specious victory: one dragon slain only to create another.

A few examples will help to an understanding of Hilbert’s distinction between mathematics (i.e., a system of meaningless signs) and meta-mathematics (meaningful statements about mathematics, the signs occurring in the calculus, their arrangement and relations). Consider the expression: 2 + 3 = 5 This expression belongs to mathematics (arithmetic) and is constructed entirely out of elementary arithmetical signs. On the other hand, the statement ‘2 + 3 = 5’ is an arithmetical formula asserts something about the displayed expression. The statement does not express an arithmetical fact and does not belong to the formal language of arithmetic; it belongs to meta-mathematics, because it characterizes a certain string of arithmetical signs as being a formula. if we wish to say something about a word (or other linguistic sign), it is not the word itself (or the sign) that can appear in the sentence, but only a name for the word (or sign). According to a standard convention we construct a name for a linguistic expression by placing single quotation marks around it. Our text adheres to this convention. It is correct to write: Chicago is a populous city. But it is incorrect to write: Chicago is tri-syllabic. To express what is intended by this latter sentence, one must write: ‘Chicago’ is tri-syllabic. Likewise, it is incorrect to write: x = 5 is an equation. We must, instead, formulate our intent by: ‘x = 5’ is an equation.

Godel devised a method of representation such that neither the arithmetical formula corresponding to a certain true meta-mathematical statement about the formula, nor the arithmetical formula corresponding to the denial of the statement, is demonstrable within the calculus. Since one of these arithmetical formulas must codify an arithmetical truth, yet neither is derivable from the axioms, the axioms are incomplete. Gödel’s method of representation also enabled him to construct an arithmetical formula corresponding to the meta-mathematical statement ‘The calculus is consistent’ and to show that this formula is not demonstrable within the calculus. It follows that the meta-mathematical statement cannot be established unless rules of inference are used that cannot be represented within the calculus, so that, in proving the statement, rules must be employed whose own consistency may be as questionable as the consistency of arithmetic itself. Gödel established these major conclusions by using a remarkably ingenious form of mapping. Since every expression in the calculus is associated with a (Gödel) number, a meta-mathematical statement about expressions and their relations to one another may be construed as a statement about the corresponding (Gödel) numbers and their arithmetical relations to one another. In this way meta-mathematics becomes completely “arithmetized.” Each metamathematical statement is represented by a unique formula within arithmetic; and the relations of logical dependence between meta-mathematical statements are fully reflected in the numerical relations of dependence between their corresponding arithmetical formulas which contain Godel Numbers. As if it was the mapping between Geometry and Algebra using a Cartesian system of coordinates.
Profile Image for Yann.
1,410 reviews388 followers
December 19, 2013
Ce livre comporte trois ouvrages distincts. Premièrement un texte de vulgarisation visant à présenter le théorème d'incomplétude de Kurt Gödel, et à expliciter autant que possible pour le tout venant comme moi les grandes étapes du raisonnements, ainsi que les techniques employées par Gödel. C'est pas mal, les notions sont introduites par degré, les grandes étapes sont exposées, ainsi que les techniques employées. Il me semble que l'on vise un public de philosophes plutôt que de matheux.

En second, la démonstration de Gödel elle-même, concise mais élaborée et touffue. Ce genre de démonstration, on ne les comprends correctement qu'à partir du moment où non seulement on parvient à les refaire soi-même, mais en plus on a très bien assimilé les fondements sur lesquels il s'appuient: ici, ma patience ne va pas jusque là, et j'ai plutôt parcouru rapidement le texte que mis ma cervelle à l'alambic.

Enfin, un texte d'un logicien français contemporain, assez acerbe et grinçant, dont j'ai le sentiment que le but est de dégonfler l’intérêt un peu exagéré que ce fameux théorème a pu susciter dans les sciences humaines, en soulignant d'ailleurs qu'il est fort peu important en mathématique, logique ou informatique. Ce genre de propos est en ligne avec ce que j'avais pu lire de Jacques Bouveresse, dans son "prodige et vertige de l'analogie", dans lequel il s'indignait de l'usage philosophique de notions mathématiques hors de leur cadre d'application strict. Ce qui le font invoquent le doit à la métaphore, mais on peut aussi à bon droit les soupçonner d'imposture si la notion prise pour image est non pas une chose claire et évidente pour tous, mais un concept difficile qui en impose par son obscurité. Comparaison n'est pas raison.

Pour expliquer rapidement, au début du siècle dernier, la logique a exploré des moyens de fonder les mathématiques de manière toujours plus rigoureuse, en formalisant les concepts afin de se dégager des pièges potentiels des ambiguïtés du langage naturel. En particulier, le jeu consiste à pouvoir construire toute l'arithmétique simple à partir d'un très petit nombre de règles logiques évidentes de base, et uniquement celle là: des axiomes. On peut donc construire des proposition générales, par composition et juxtaposition de ces axiomes généraux, mais inversement, on se demandait s'il était possible de construire des propositions vraies quand on les évalue, mais qu'on ne pouvait pas réduire à ces axiomes. Le théorème prouve que c'est le cas, après avoir modélisé précisément ces fameuses propositions construites mécaniquement.

On a évoqué la question de savoir si ce théorème pouvait fournir des arguments pour défendre la distinction analytique / synthétique de Kant pour les maths. Je n'y vois pas plus clair. Je n'ai jamais vu et je continue à ne voir les maths que comme purement analytiques, que comme la subdivision infinie d'une même chose, que comme une longue série d'évidences et de tautologies qui ne permettront jamais de rien découvrir. On n'y fait que définir des symboles maniables qui peuvent nous intéresser par aspect pratique: elles fournissent un modèle abstrait hyper simplifié et générique qu'on peut plaquer sur la réalité pour deviner grossièrement ce qui se passe. En affinant plus ou moins le degré d'abstraction, on embrasse plus ou moins de choses, ou on a plus ou moins de propriétés utiles sous la main. Après, elles ont aussi une beauté: on peut être sensible autant à l'ingéniosité qu'à l'harmonie qu'elles recèlent, et leur pratique, malgré l'implacable acribie qu'elles mobilisent, peut soulever un plaisir et un enthousiasme qui peut facilement aller jusqu'au transport.
Profile Image for Szplug.
466 reviews1,470 followers
April 24, 2011
My thanks to AC for convincing me to take the plunge and purchase this little gem: who'd have thought that one-hundred-and-thirteen pages of mathematical logic could have been so entertainingly informative? It was little touches like the chess analogy for describing the relationship between mathematics and metamathematics, the placing of the Richard paradox in terms that were more pellucid than the valiant effort attempted by Rebecca Goldstein, and the tricky, but effective, explanation of how Gödel Numbers were mapped, and how they were further configured to perform their quite amazing feat of transposing metamathematical statements about the formal mathematical calculus into the formulas of the calculus itself. What's more, the appendix led me to dive into the slippery spaghetti of a more in-depth examination of the principles of logical inference and tautologies in absolute proofs. A wonderful book, one which I am surprisingly happy to have read. Perhaps now I'm ready for DFW's tour of infinity!

A nifty bit of enlightenment was the discovery of how those endless hours spent typing out Javascript, VBScript, and ActionScript actually represented my own forays into a (much) more modest and elementary form of the logic that comprises the mathematical form wielded so expertly and shatteringly by the Mighty Gödel. I believe it went some ways towards allowing me a clearer understanding of what Nagel and Newman were saying - though they did a magnificent job all on their own of making the entire affair intelligible to this math-rusty reader.
Profile Image for Joshua Nomen-Mutatio.
333 reviews1,010 followers
August 29, 2008
This was an extremely difficult book for me. I understood so little of it on my own but luckily was reading it in school where I had people around me who were more mathematically fluent than myself to explain what the hell was going on. It was fascinating and frustrating and the basic ideas I gleaned from it were worth the headaches
Profile Image for Jodh Singh.
2 reviews1 follower
April 25, 2017
The first 80 pages are a breeze, but pages 80-92 need many re-reads.

P.S. Remember to not miss-use the incompleteness proof to give sweeping and profound statements about nature of the world or other mumbo jumbo. Godel went to a great deal of trouble to write a very exact and general proof, do not desecrate his work to prove weird stuff.
Profile Image for Basel.
17 reviews10 followers
May 24, 2020
This book is great in showing the essence of Gödel’s proof.where regardless of the axiomatic system enlargement a true arithmetic statements exist that cannot be deducible from them. Making the axiomatic system unable in exhausting all mathematical true statements or showing that there are endless true independent statements.Hence rendering the axiomatic system if consistent is also incomplete.

Which also explain Gödel’s ‘platonic realism’ in which mathematical truths are objects we happen to stumble upon in the universe of abstract thought.like we stumble on a new specie or an island on Earth.

But even though this book make a good deal of introducing both the symbolic language of logic and what does it mean to proof something also what consistency of axiomatic system should mean both in finistic and -nonfinstic forms.before heading to Gödel.one cannot say it’s enough in elucidating all of Gödel’s proof steps nor in showing the manifestations of the most important proof of the 20th century.a further reading in the subject is needed and this is a more than a good introduction and essence showing to start with.Yet this book is self-sufficient. having a prior elementary understanding of symbolic logic and proofs would be better in-before starting reading about Gödel in this book or other.
Profile Image for David Olmsted.
Author 2 books12 followers
January 26, 2013
This book is one of those rare creations in which its clarity and succinctness of presentation highlights the most important concepts. Even if one is not interested in the theory itself the first half of the book is a must read by anyone dealing with mathematics or interested in the nature of truth. It ultimately describes the 1931 paper Kurt Godel published in German entitled “On Formally Undecidable Propositions of Principia Mathematica and Related Systems”. The “Principia Mathematica” was the 1913 monumental 3 volume work by Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell which was thought to have placed the foundations of mathematics on a firm non-intuitive foundation using a logic based axiomatic strategy. Godel showed that this strategy cannot be used to demonstrate internal consistency, that the mathematics so derived is not always without contradiction even though that may actually be the case. Consistency is just not provable by this sort of strategy.
Profile Image for Roiu.
7 reviews2 followers
January 7, 2022
Отличная (и компактная) книга, раскрывающая предысторию, саму структуру доказательства, и последствия для математики и логики двух гёделевских теорем о неполноте. Скорее всего будет понятна и тем, кто не имеет специальных знаний в области логики и математики.
Profile Image for Sarip Dol.
47 reviews56 followers
June 6, 2017
Untuk sebuah karya (pemudah) matematik, buku ini sebenarnya sangat mudah untuk dibaca; lebih mudah daripada apa yang aku bayangkan. Aku fikir, ada dua sebab: (1) penulis berjaya memberikan gambaran jelas tentang apa yang Godel telah usahakan, dan penulis telah abaikan sejumlah pembuktian formula yang ia rasakan tak perlu; dan (2) aku membaca buku ini dengan maksud meninjau apa yang Godel katakan, dan bukan kenapa apa yang Godel katakan itu benar. Jadinya, sepanjang pembacaan, aku tidak begitu terganggu dengan (1).

Aku fikir, sebelum mukasurat ke 69, buku ini sebenarnya amat mudah. Bab-bab awal lebih ditekankan tentang sejarah pengaksioman matematik (jadi, lebih banyak sembang konsep berbanding simbol/angka) dan pengenalan kepada istilah-istilah asas untuk memahami Bab Lima. Bab Lima ialah jantung kepada buku ini, iaitu hujah Godel sendiri dalam membuktikan bahawa,

(∃y) ~(∃x) Dem(x, y) ⊃ ~ (∃x) Dem( x, Sub( n, 17, n))

Nampak macam gempak, tapi sebenarnya kalau kau baca dari awal sampai akhir dan fahamkan maksud bagi setiap simbol, ungkapan ini sebenarnya bawa maksud yang ringkas sahaja. Maksudnya ringkas tetapi pembuktian dan kesannya agak mencabar untuk difahami. Aku fikir Bab 5 saja bacaan aku terbantut sebab kena renung dan kena semak forum-forum di Internet untuk faham dengan lebih lanjut.

Pendekatan aku dalam membaca buku ini ialah, pada bab-bab awal, terima saja seperti seorang anak yang baru belajar bahasa asing. Tidak perlu aku persoalkan kenapa 'air' ialah 'water' dan bukan 'fire' dalam bahasa Inggeris. Tapi aku tidak nafikan kemungkinan aku silap dalam memahami bahasa baru ini.

MENGAPA AKU BACA BUKU INI?

Sebab aku fikir Teori Ketaklengkapan Godel (TKG) ini mempunyai suatu nilai epistemologi, iaitu memperihalkan kerapuhan andaian aksiomatik sesuatu sistem pemikiran. Bagaimanapun, hakikatnya Godel tetap seorang ahli logik-matematik yang tidak membawakan perbahasan falsafah melainkan pembuktian matematik yang ada sedikit nilai kefalsafahannya. Justeru, TKG ini, setakat yang aku faham, hanyalah pemerihalan tentang kemustahilan untuk mendirikan sebuah dasar aksiom kepada sistem yang arithmetik dan merangkumi nombor-nombor natural. Bukan semua sistem diserangnya, bahkan dalam salah satu forum yang aku layari, dikatakan bahawa TKG ini tidak menyerang lapangan Geometri pun.

Aku fikir sepatutnya buku ini dapat tiga bintang, tapi sebab banyak buka mata, tambah lagi satu.

Sepanjang membaca buku ini, aku dibantu oleh:
1. http://logic.amu.edu.pl/images/f/f2/S...
2. http://www.dartmouth.edu/~swaroop/God...
3. https://mathoverflow.net/questions/14...
Profile Image for Ed.
69 reviews21 followers
August 11, 2011
I recommend this book for readers who want a clear and concise introduction to Godel's proof. The book will be especially useful for readers whose interests lie primarily in mathematics or logic, but who do not have very much prior knowledge of this important proof. Readers with broader interests, who would like to explore the larger implications of the proof for science or philosophy, may be disappointed that the book ends where it does. Godel's Incompleteness Theorem is cited by many scholars who question some of the fundamental assumptions of science. Just to give one example, it figures prominently in Robert Rosen's argument that a computing machine is an inadequate model for an organism. It is relevant to the question of whether everything that nature does can be understood as a computation, as Wolfram and many others have maintained. This book would have been more exciting if it had delved into a few of these discussions. Instead the authors wrap it up quickly with a brief "concluding reflections" chapter, as if they had a deadline to meet or a severe space limitation to conform to. That may leave some readers understanding the logic of the proof, but saying "so what?"
Profile Image for Arefeh Yavary.
95 reviews12 followers
November 3, 2017
قسمتی از جملات و مفاهیم که شاید در حدود ۳۰ مورد باشند به دلیل پدیده‌ترجمه، برای خوانندگان فارسی زبان کتاب به سختی قابل فهم باشند

بعضی از حکایات چند بار تکرار شدند ....

برای افرادی که با ریاضیات مسئله روبرو بوده‌اند، این کتاب از این رو می‌تواند جالب توجه باشد که بعد کیفی بیان مسئله را برایشان پر رنگ‌تر می‌کند

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اما نه برای زبان فارسی....

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ارجاع داده‌شده به گودل:
زمان یک توهم است
ما از این رو به وجود زمان معتقدیم چون که فرض می‌کنیم پدیده‌های مختلفی را تجربه میکنیم
ولی همه‌ی این‌ها یک واقعیت هستند
در حقیقت یک چیز هستند
پس چیزهای مختلفی رو تجربه نمیکنیم
و هر دفعه داریم یک چیز میبینیم
پس فرض وجود تجربه‌های مختلف غلط هست
پس وجود زمان با تفکر فعلی ما غلط هست

یعنی زمان توهم ماست و در ساختار اصلی دنیا وجود ندارد
زمان در توهم ما وجود دارد
728 reviews309 followers
August 7, 2017
This book makes you feel smart for understanding (a dumbed-down version of) the proof of Gödel's incompleteness theorem.
Profile Image for Fateme Ghasemi.
101 reviews38 followers
January 28, 2019
در مورد اثبات گودل صرفا حرف زده بود و دانش یا دید بیشتری به من نداد..ولی در مورد شخصیت گودل،خوشحالم که قسمت دوم.کتاب رو خوندم.
Profile Image for Mahdi Taheri.
34 reviews13 followers
November 10, 2018
قضیه گودل نشان میدهد که هرچقدر خواسته باشیم ریاضیات را با فرمالیزه کردن به بند دراوریم، باز از بند میرهد. در واقع هرچقدرهم به سیستم اصول موضوعی متنوع مجهز باشیم و در اضافه کردن اصول جدید هم مختار باشیم، باز گزاره هایی وجود خواهند داشت که نمیتوان درستی یا نادرستی آن را در این سیستم از اصول موضوع به روش فرمال اثبات کرد.
قضیه گودل نمیگوید که ریاضیات از عهده فهم ما خارج است (رویکردی نا امیدوارانه) بلکه بیان میکند که نمیتوان ریاضیات را محدود به روش خاصی کرد و نگاهی تک بعدی(فرمال) به آن داشت (رویکردی امیدوارانه). ریاضیات بسیار فراتر از ابزارهای محدودی است که با آن قصد فهم کاملش را داریم. همواره ناشناخته هایی در ریاضیات وجود دارد که نیاز به خلاقیت هست تا آن را بشناسیم.

اما نکته ای که شخصا از مطالعه کتاب یاد گرفتم و آن را متا-متاریاضی مینامم انست که: فرق است بین اینکه بگوییم چیزی محدود است تا بگوییم ابزار ما محدود است. هیچ شناختی از ما نسبت به یک موضوع نمیتواند شناخت کاملی باشد اما همواره راه برای شناخت بهتر وجود دارد

اگر با سیستم اصول موضوع ریاضی مثل اصول موضوع هندسه یا اصول موضوع اعداد حقیقی و ... اشنایی دارید فصلهای ابتدایی کتاب راحت خوانده میشود تا فصل نهایی که به ایده های اثبات گودل میپردازد که نیازمند وقت و تعمق خیلی بیشتری است.
Profile Image for Saul.
40 reviews3 followers
Read
July 18, 2023
An excellent guide to one of the most important papers in 20th century mathematics. The writing was super clear and I felt like I finally understood the proper context of the problem, and the implications of the results. They are often cast in a negative way, implying that they expose a "hole" at the heart of mathematical knowledge. This is not quite true, since they merely prove the limits of "formal systems" like Principia Mathematica. As they authors conclude:

The theorem does indicate that the structure and power of the human mind are far more complex and subtle than any non-living machine yet envisaged. Gödel’s own work is a remarkable example of such complexity and subtlety. It is an occasion, not for dejection, but for a renewed appreciation of the powers of creative reason.
Profile Image for Sandys Nunes.
60 reviews3 followers
December 18, 2014


Até a parte preliminar à explicação da prova de Gödel eu entendi, já quanto a prova em si... nãããããooo.

Mas tenho algumas observações.

1ª. **Consistência de um sistema**.
Dado um sistema formado por um conjunto finito de axiomas, provando-se que esse sistema jamais produzirá teoremas contraditórios, então o sistema é consistente.

2ª. No fim das contas (que contas!) a prova de Gödel mostra que, se um sistema é consistente ele terá algumas proposições verdadeiras que não podem ser demostradas nem negadas. Além disso Gödel mostrou que um sistema não pode provar sua própria consistência, a não ser que ele seja inconsistente.

3ª. O teorema da incompletude abre portas para discussões na área de filosofia da matemática e teoria dos números, como: é possível um computador pensar como a mente humana? Qual o limite para a mente humana? Para tentar responder essa perguntas, ou não, irei ler GEB!

Profile Image for William Yonts.
25 reviews3 followers
August 25, 2024
Honestly? This is the first text in a while that has me really fired up. I’m zapped into thought. A system of reasoning derived from axioms cannot prove all truths and cannot prove itself to be without contradiction… but Nagel and Newman are right, this is not cause for despair, for that just means there will always be some new truth for us to discover, we just need a different approach. Though clearly this was written a while ago, those concluding remarks on AI versus the boundless human mind, how quaint!
Profile Image for Kushagra Sachan.
2 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2024
Squeaky clean exposition of a tricky business—at least as far as I surmise is possible within the ambit of colloquial, non-technical language.

I'm cheeky for making this vaguely sideways reference to the matter—but it's perhaps appropriately fitting that any text which is ambitious enough to try generating from its finitude, an understanding of the entirety of Gödel's proof in its reader, will anyway come a bit short of being sufficiently complete, no matter how many clarifications one adds, unless one resorts to some meta-resourcing (hehe, Maths Stack Exchange). But I think the book's being excellent-enough is its very grace.

Meme: And yet a trace of the true self, remains in the false self.

Flaws regarding some mathematical details creep in towards the end (from what my unending supplementary surveys on the web, & MathSE has informed), but surely owing to expository license for a greater audience. Perhaps if I had read the actual paper, I could call for being a pedantic snob, but I don't qualify. Five stars.

Complaining in the face of maths is always futile, and yet the thing it is happens in the quiet tears of the very endeavour. Having thusly furnished a self-comforting truism for a conclusion, let me close this review, for I've procrastinated quite the last chunk of January enjoying only this read. I ought to be more consistent with my goals, and complete them on time. Wait, oh Göd...
Profile Image for MindOverMatter.
304 reviews
April 23, 2021
I had a bit of difficulties to find my way into the book. It seemed verbose and informal in the beginning and the terminology took some getting used to. Also, sometimes the authors overexplain some basics while not really defining/introducing other things properly that were more important in my opinion. I found the elaboration of Russel's antinomy related to defining sets of sets not containing themselves particularly annoying. It is much better and less verbosely described elsewhere.

But the book grew on me more and more with each chapter until the grand finale, Gödel's proofs, which is why I read the book in the first place. The semi-fomal way of paving the way towards that finale together with the semi-formal way of surveying what Gödel did, surprisingly turned out to be a really nice didactic way of taking the reader by the hand and giving her a view and a grasp over the quite difficult territory of the ingenious gödel numbering and proof techniques.
Profile Image for Alireza Naderi.
36 reviews18 followers
August 6, 2024
What a gem! If you look for a short yet essentially rigorous introduction to Gödel's (infamous) incompleteness theorems, put beautifully in its historical context, and written clearly without requiring much existing mathematical knowledge, look no further. If you tend to misunderstand and overinterpret Gödel's work, here's what the authors have to tell you:

“The discovery that there are arithmetical truths which cannot be demonstrated formally does not mean that there are truths which are forever incapable of becoming known, or that a "mystic" intuition (radically different in kind and authority from what is generally operative in intellectual advances) must replace cogent proof. It does not mean, as a recent writer claims, that there are "ineluctable limits to human reason." It does mean that the resources of the human intellect have not been, and cannot be, fully formalized, and that new principles of demonstration forever await invention and discovery.”
8 reviews
May 31, 2025
I liked it a lot. Read it on the plane and I think I got a good intuition out on the structure and corollaries of the proof. I have a bit of a math background and read papers fairly regularly though so I’m not sure it would land as well for people with less experience, maybe without of the footnotes it reads a bit more intuitively. I still think I only have a loose grasp of the construction of G that could use some shoring up. For those with a math background there will be occasional odd/unnecessary euphemisms and analogies (e.g. avoiding describing a proof as induction or whatever else). The conclusion was a bit spitbally and I found the AI digression a bit odd… the chapter tries to dispel mysticism while bringing mystical properties to the brain. To be clear I don’t find it likely that AI will spit out consistent and useful meta mathematical reasoning or sufficiently interesting enlarged arithmetic formalisms but the chapter seems to imply some inherent mysticism beyond probabilistic interpretations of thought. I don’t really know what I think of all that but I didn’t find the chapter so cogent. Overall enjoyed it.
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