Logical foundations of proof complexity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Logical foundations of proof complexity
(Perspectives in logic)
Association for Symbolic Logic , Cambridge University Press, 2014, c2010
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 457-464) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book treats bounded arithmetic and propositional proof complexity from the point of view of computational complexity. The first seven chapters include the necessary logical background for the material and are suitable for a graduate course. Associated with each of many complexity classes are both a two-sorted predicate calculus theory, with induction restricted to concepts in the class, and a propositional proof system. The complexity classes range from AC0 for the weakest theory up to the polynomial hierarchy. Each bounded theorem in a theory translates into a family of (quantified) propositional tautologies with polynomial size proofs in the corresponding proof system. The theory proves the soundness of the associated proof system. The result is a uniform treatment of many systems in the literature, including Buss's theories for the polynomial hierarchy and many disparate systems for complexity classes such as AC0, AC0(m), TC0, NC1, L, NL, NC, and P.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The predicate calculus and the system
- 3. Peano arithmetic and its subsystems
- 4. Two-sorted logic and complexity classes
- 5. The theory V0 and AC0
- 6. The theory V1 and polynomial time
- 7. Propositional translations
- 8. Theories for polynomial time and beyond
- 9. Theories for small classes
- 10. Proof systems and the reflection principle
- 11. Computation models.
by "Nielsen BookData"