Bulletin of Symbolic Logic

A natural axiomatization of computability and proof of Church's Thesis

Nachum Dershowitz and Yuri Gurevich
Source: Bull. Symbolic Logic Volume 14, Issue 3 (2008), 299-350.

Abstract

Church's Thesis asserts that the only numeric functions that can be calculated by effective means are the recursive ones, which are the same, extensionally, as the Turing-computable numeric functions. The Abstract State Machine Theorem states that every classical algorithm is behaviorally equivalent to an abstract state machine. This theorem presupposes three natural postulates about algorithmic computation. Here, we show that augmenting those postulates with an additional requirement regarding basic operations gives a natural axiomatization of computability and a proof of Church's Thesis, as Gödel and others suggested may be possible. In a similar way, but with a different set of basic operations, one can prove Turing's Thesis, characterizing the effective string functions, and—in particular—the effectively-computable functions on string representations of numbers.

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Primary Subjects: 03D10
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Links and Identifiers

Permanent link to this document: http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.bsl/1231081370
Digital Object Identifier: doi:10.2178/bsl/1231081370
Mathematical Reviews number (MathSciNet): MR2440596
Zentralblatt MATH identifier: 05532698


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Bulletin of Symbolic Logic

Bulletin of Symbolic Logic

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