The homepage for this course has moved to Stellar.
 
| Meetings | MWF 1:00-2:00, 2-102 |
|---|---|
| Instructor | Eric Rosen |
| Office | 2-279 |
| rosen (at) math (dot) mit (dot) edu | |
| Description |
This course provides an introduction to
mathematical logic. Topics to be covered include the syntax and semantics
of first-order logic, formal proofs, the completeness and compactness
theorems, basic model theory, Godel's Incompleteness Theorems,
and elements of recursion theory, the study of computable
functions.
Throughout the semester, we will also be considering the foundational role of logic with respect to basic questions about mathematics. For example, what is a mathematical proof? Are there mathematical claims that are true but not provable? (How) do we know that mathematics is not inconsistent? Can one formalize the notion of an algorithm? |
| Text | Mathematical Logic, by
Ebbinghaus, Flum, and Thomas
(Springer 1994)
Information about the book can be found on amazon. |
| Grading | Homework (30%), two midterms (40%), final exam (30%) |
Last updated May 29 2007