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A rudimentary definition of addition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2014

R. W. Ritchie*
Affiliation:
University of Washington

Extract

In [S, pp. 77–88], Smullyan introduced the class of rudimentary relations, and showed that they form a basis for the recursively enumerable sets. He also asked [S, p. 81] if the addition and multiplication relations were rudimentary. In this note we answer one of these questions by showing that the addition relation is rudimentary. This result was communicated to Smullyan orally in 1960 and is announced in [S, p. 81, footnote 1]. However, the proof has not yet appeared in print. (Shortly after the publication of [S], James H. Bennett, using much more subtle methods than those of this note, showed that the multiplication relation is also rudimentary. That result appears in his doctoral dissertation [B], and is being prepared for publication.)

Let us begin by reviewing Smullyan's definition [S, p. 10] of dyadic notation for the positive integers. Each positive integer a is identified with the unique string anan−1a1a0 of 1's and 2's such that a = Σin=0ai2i Because of this identification, we are able to speak of typographical properties of numbers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 1965

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References

REFERENCES

[B]Bennett, James H., On spectra, Doctoral dissertation, Princeton University, 1962.Google Scholar
[S]Smullyan, R. M., Theory of formal systems, Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1961.CrossRefGoogle Scholar