Tell your friends about this item:
Computation, Proof, Machine: Mathematics Enters a New Age Dowek, Gilles (Ecole Polytechnique, Paris) New edition
Computation, Proof, Machine: Mathematics Enters a New Age
Dowek, Gilles (Ecole Polytechnique, Paris)
Computation, calculation, algorithms - all have played an important role in mathematical progress from the beginning - but behind the scenes, their contribution was obscured in the enduring mathematical literature. To understand the future of mathematics, this fascinating book returns to its past, tracing the hidden history that follows the thread of computation.
Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Part I. Ancient Origins: 1. From the prehistory to the Greeks; 2. Two thousand years of computation; Part II. The Age of Reason: 3. Predicate logic; 4. The decision problem; 5. Church's thesis; 6. Lambda-calculus; 7. Constructivity; 8. Constructive proofs and algorithms; Part III. Crisis of the Axiomatic Method: 9. Intuitionistic type theory; 10. Automated proof; 11. Automated proof checking; 12. News from the field; 13. Instruments; 14. The end of axioms?; 15. Conclusion: as we near the end of this mathematical voyage. Publisher Marketing: Computation is revolutionizing our world, even the inner world of the pure mathematician. Mathematical methods especially the notion of proof that have their roots in classical antiquity have seen a radical transformation since the 1970s, as successive advances have challenged the priority of reason over computation. Like many revolutions, this one comes from within. Computation, calculation, algorithms all have played an important role in mathematical progress from the beginning but behind the scenes, their contribution was obscured in the enduring mathematical literature. To understand the future of mathematics, this fascinating book returns to its past, tracing the hidden history that follows the thread of computation. Along the way it invites us to reconsider the dialog between mathematics and the natural sciences, as well as the relationship between mathematics and computer science. It also sheds new light on philosophical concepts, such as the notions of analytic and synthetic judgment. Finally, it brings us to the brink of the new age, in which machine intelligence offers new ways of solving mathematical problems previously inaccessible. This book is the 2007 Winner of the Grand Prix de Philosophie de l'Academie Francaise."
Contributor Bio: Dowek, Gilles Gilles Dowek is a mathematician, logician and computer scientist, and currently a researcher at the French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automation (INRIA). He is a member of the scientific board of the Societe informatique de France and of CERNA. He is also a consultant with the National Institute of Aerospace, a NASA-affiliated laboratory. He is the recipient of the French Mathematical Society's Grand Prix d'Alembert des Lyceens for his popular science work. Contributor Bio: Guillot, Pierre Pierre Guillot is a lecturer in Mathematics at the University of Strasbourg's Institute of Advanced Mathematical Research (IRMA). Contributor Bio: Roman, Marion Marion Roman is a France-based translator.
| Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
| Released | May 5, 2015 |
| ISBN13 | 9780521118019 |
| Publishers | Cambridge University Press |
| Pages | 158 |
| Dimensions | 236 × 225 × 13 mm · 296 g |
| Language | English |
| Translator | Guillot, Pierre |
| Translator | Roman, Marion |