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Widely praised for its clarity and thorough coverage, this comprehensive overview of mathematical logic is suitable for readers of many different backgrounds. Designed primarily for advanced undergraduates and graduate students of mathematics, the treatment also contains much of interest to advanced students in computer science and philosophy. An introductory section prepares readers for successive chapters on propositional logic and first-order languages and logic. Subsequent chapters shift in emphasis from an approach to logic from a mathematical point of view to the interplay between mathematics and logic. Topics include the theorems of Gรถdel, Church, and Tarski on incompleteness, undecidability, and indefinability; a rigorous treatment of recursive functions and recursive relations; computability theory; and Hilbert's Tenth Problem. Numerous exercises appear throughout the text, and an appendix offers helpful background on number theory. Review: Excellent book. Good balance between intuition and formalism - I'm a machine learning scientist and have been returning to this book since 2015 to read up on first order logic and Godel theorems. Unlike many books in this area, I think this book strikes a great balance between rigor and intuition. I love how the author first uses (un)decidability as a conceptual placeholder to explain concepts such as Godel expressibility before formalizing it later with recursion. This book has been my self-study guide to learning foundations, starting with formal languages and axioms as basic as counting notches on a paper, up till (almost) grasping proofs of Godel's incompleteness theorems. Review: Got What I Needed Out of It - Honestly, this book gets into the arcana of theories and systems a bit more than I needed, but it still served as a decent semi-introduction/review for a high school math teacher / computer programmer who was trying to help out a former student taking an introductory class in mathematical logic. If you are in a similar situation as I was, I recommend reading the start of each chapter in detail and when it gets too theoretical just skim. Also, for some reason the first chapter dives pretty hard into advanced concepts like formal systems, relations, decidability, etc. that are arguably more difficult than the bulk of the following chapters. The author recommends to "cover it as needed" in the preface. This is good advice as the next few chapters are a bit easier and more on topic. Anyway, aside from being rather challenging in parts for a non-expert, it is also extremely well organized and readable with an index etc., hence a reasonable choice even for a less advanced mathematician like myself. If you are looking to touch on more advanced topics (the work of Godel, Tarski, Church, etc.), it will do that too.
| Best Sellers Rank | #617,295 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #239 in Mathematical Logic #1,381 in Mathematics (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 51 Reviews |
A**E
Excellent book. Good balance between intuition and formalism
I'm a machine learning scientist and have been returning to this book since 2015 to read up on first order logic and Godel theorems. Unlike many books in this area, I think this book strikes a great balance between rigor and intuition. I love how the author first uses (un)decidability as a conceptual placeholder to explain concepts such as Godel expressibility before formalizing it later with recursion. This book has been my self-study guide to learning foundations, starting with formal languages and axioms as basic as counting notches on a paper, up till (almost) grasping proofs of Godel's incompleteness theorems.
J**M
Got What I Needed Out of It
Honestly, this book gets into the arcana of theories and systems a bit more than I needed, but it still served as a decent semi-introduction/review for a high school math teacher / computer programmer who was trying to help out a former student taking an introductory class in mathematical logic. If you are in a similar situation as I was, I recommend reading the start of each chapter in detail and when it gets too theoretical just skim. Also, for some reason the first chapter dives pretty hard into advanced concepts like formal systems, relations, decidability, etc. that are arguably more difficult than the bulk of the following chapters. The author recommends to "cover it as needed" in the preface. This is good advice as the next few chapters are a bit easier and more on topic. Anyway, aside from being rather challenging in parts for a non-expert, it is also extremely well organized and readable with an index etc., hence a reasonable choice even for a less advanced mathematician like myself. If you are looking to touch on more advanced topics (the work of Godel, Tarski, Church, etc.), it will do that too.
M**N
Nice job.
Product came as advertised
A**N
The book itself is broad and detailed othervicely with an excellent set of exercises and reviews of the theories from ...
Book is well written, except on one parts: now and then the proofs for theorems, lemmas etc. are quite unfinished and as such demand working on them. The book itself is broad and detailed othervicely with an excellent set of exercises and reviews of the theories from basic theories to computability and somewhat decision theory. Indeed, this one can be warmly recommed from beginners to advanged students and hobbyist alike who demand more exercises and good source book to bookstand.
A**R
Great book, but semi-junk typeface/fonts
At first, I didn't really like this book, but it was okay...but I kept studying in...off and on. Meanwhile, I studied many other logic books as well. However, over time, I realized how priceless this book really was. It's quite excellent, especially when you get further in. It also covers lots of material skipped by other books.
S**S
Intuitive, Rigorous, Amazing
This is by far one of the best mathematics books I have read to date. The author clearly has a solid understanding of the material and didn't just copy and paste from previous works in the field. Highly Recommend if you're interested in mathematics, computer science or philosophy.
L**Z
A nice intro to math logic.
Looks Good.
P**O
A wonderful book!
One of the best books ever written on Logica Matemรกtica! A must-read!
A**R
Clear and concise
Great for self-study.
B**M
Well written, easy to grasp the ideas with limited effort
The type of writing intended to make the reader's easy. Clear, concise with a limited amount of notations, intuitions are always to the point, this writing allows for a smooth reading of an otherwise difficult topic. Pity editors do force authors to write this way.
X**5
Only done two chapters so far.
Looks like the Dover Books are worth to collect, might buy some more in the serials later. You just can't have enough math.
A**R
Classic book!!
This dover reprint of original Addison wesley book. It covers everything relevant for CS students. I got new book for 68 INR (40 INR delivery charges). Go for it .
G**O
Great book, even better price
I can't really compare because it's the only book I've read on the topic. I absolutely loved it though and usually textbooks like this are way more expensive.
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