Two weak arithmetics

Abstract

Our last big theorem – Theorem 6 – tells us that if a theory meets certain conditions, then it must be negation incomplete. And we made some initial arm-waving remarks to the effect that it seems plausible that we should want theories which meet those conditions. Later, we announced that there actually is a consistent weak arithmetic with a first-order logic which meets the conditions (in which case, stronger arithmetics will also meet the conditions); but we didn’t say anything about what such a weak theory really looks like. In fact, we haven’t looked at any detailed theory of arithmetic yet! It is high time, then, that we stop operating at the extreme level of abstraction of Episodes 1 and 2, and start getting our hands dirty. This Episode introduces a couple of weak arithmetics, before we tackle the canonical first-order arithmetic PA in the following instalment. By all means skip fairly lightly over some of the more boring proof details! But it is certainly worth getting just a flavour of how these two simple formal theories work

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2009-11-21

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Peter Eldridge-Smith
Australian National University

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