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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London :Springer London :
    UID:
    almahu_9948621086202882
    Format: X, 164 p. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 2001.
    ISBN: 9781447103073
    Series Statement: Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science
    Content: In The Unknowable I use LISP to compare my work on incompleteness with that of G6del and Turing, and in The Limits of Mathematics I use LISP to discuss my work on incompleteness in more detail. In this book we'll use LISP to explore my theory of randomness, called algorithmic information theory (AIT). And when I say "explore" I mean it! This book is full of exercises for the reader, ranging from the mathematical equivalent oftrivial "fin­ ger warm-ups" for pianists, to substantial programming projects, to questions I can formulate precisely but don't know how to answer, to questions that I don't even know how to formulate precisely! I really want you to follow my example and hike offinto the wilder­ ness and explore AIT on your own! You can stay on the trails that I've blazed and explore the well-known part of AIT, or you can go off on your own and become a fellow researcher, a colleague of mine! One way or another, the goal of this book is to make you into a participant, not a passive observer of AlT. In other words, it's too easy to just listen to a recording of AIT, that's not the way to learn music.
    Note: I Introduction -- Historical introduction-A century of controversy over the foundations of mathematics -- What is LISP? Why do I like it? -- How to program my universal Turing machine in LISP -- II Program Size -- A self-delimiting Turing machine considered as a set of (program, output) pairs -- How to construct self-delimiting Turing machines: the Kraft inequality -- The connection between program-size complexity and algorithmic probability: H(x) = ? log2P(x) +O(1). Occam's razor: there are few minimum-size programs -- The basic result on relative complexity: H(y?x) = H(x,y)-H(x)+O(1) -- III Randomness -- Theoretical interlude-What is randomness? My definitions -- Proof that Martin-Löf randomness is equivalent to Chaitin randomness -- Proof that Solovay randomness is equivalent to Martin-Löf randomness -- Proof that Solovay randomness is equivalent to strong Chaitin randomness -- IV Future Work -- Extending AIT to the size of programs for computing infinite sets and to computations with oracles -- Postscript-Letter to a daring young reader.
    In: Springer Nature eBook
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781852334178
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781447103080
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781447110859
    Language: English
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