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Extensions of Some Theorems of Gödel and Church

Reference: Rosser, J. Barkley (1936). “Extensions of some theorems of Gödel and Church.” Journal of Symbolic Logic 1(3), 87–91. DOI 10.2307/2269028. Open scan: JSTOR.

Summary

A five-page paper that sharpens Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem and Church’s undecidability theorem by replacing the hypothesis of ω-consistency with the weaker hypothesis of simple consistency. Gödel 1931 constructed, for an ω-consistent, effectively axiomatised theory P interpreting arithmetic, a sentence G ≡ "I am not provable in P"; Gödel could prove G is unprovable from simple consistency alone, but needed ω-consistency to exclude ¬G being provable. Rosser shows that by a clever modification of the self-referential sentence one can drop this stronger hypothesis.

The technical device — now universally known as the Rosser trick — replaces the Gödel sentence with a Rosser sentence R that says, informally, “for every proof of me, there is a smaller proof of my negation.” Formally, if Bew(y, x) is the proof predicate, R encodes ∀y. Bew(y, ⌜R⌝) → ∃z ≤ y. Bew(z, ⌜¬R⌝). Analysing the two cases — R provable or ¬R provable — now requires only simple consistency: from either provability claim together with consistency one extracts a contradiction by a primitive recursive comparison of proof lengths. Hence for any consistent, effectively axiomatised, sufficiently strong theory, R is independent. The same idea extends Church’s 1936 result: the set of theorems is not recursive, given only simple consistency.

Rosser’s paper is short, elegant, and methodologically paradigmatic: replacing an ω-style hypothesis by a simple hypothesis via a bounded-quantifier device is now a stock move in proof theory and recursion theory. The Rosser sentence itself is the standard presentation of the first incompleteness theorem in modern textbooks; Gödel’s original form is cited for historical reasons but Rosser’s is what students actually prove.

Key Ideas

  • Rosser sentence R: “every proof of me is matched by a smaller proof of my negation.”
  • Weakening hypothesis from ω-consistency to simple consistency in Gödel’s first theorem.
  • Rosser trick: bounded quantifiers comparing proof lengths resolve the two cases without ω-consistency.
  • Corresponding sharpening of Church’s undecidability theorem: theoremhood is not recursive under simple consistency alone.
  • Methodological template: ω-style hypotheses can often be replaced by simple hypotheses via bounded-quantifier comparisons.

Connections

Conceptual Contribution

  • Claim: Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem and Church’s theorem on the undecidability of first-order logic hold under the weaker hypothesis of simple consistency; ω-consistency is not needed.
  • Mechanism: Replace the Gödel sentence G ≡ ¬∃y. Bew(y, ⌜G⌝) with the Rosser sentence R ≡ ∀y. Bew(y, ⌜R⌝) → ∃z ≤ y. Bew(z, ⌜¬R⌝). Using only simple consistency, analyse supposed proofs of R or ¬R by comparing proof-length witnesses via bounded quantifiers; derive a contradiction in each case.
  • Concepts introduced/used: Rosser sentence, Rosser trick, simple vs. ω-consistency, bounded-quantifier self-reference, Consistency and Completeness
  • Stance: foundational technical paper (mathematical logic)
  • Relates to: Directly strengthens Gödel 1931 and Church 1936; the bounded-quantifier device is a methodological template reused throughout recursion theory and Kleene 1943’s hierarchy work.

Tags

#foundational #incompleteness #rosser #mathematical-logic #consistency #self-reference

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