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- Title Hack, Hack, Who's There? A Gentle Introduction to Model Theory
- Authors David Reid
- Publisher: Smashwords (Dec 25, 2016)
- Paperback: ???
- eBook: PDF, ePub, Mobi, etc.
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: N/A
- ISBN-13: 978-1370372249
- Share This:
The skeleton of this narrative nonfiction book is a science fiction story without the usual mangling of physics. The flesh is composed of self-contained non-technical mainstream explanations and examples of the field of mathematics which deals with meaning, called Model Theory. Technical terms are avoided, except to occasionally serve as keywords.
About the Authors- N/A
- Mathematical Logic - Computability, Set Theory, Model Theory, etc
- Theory of Programming Languages
- Theory of Computation
- Introduction to Computer Science
- Hacking and Hackers
- Hack, Hack, Who's There? A Gentle Introduction to Model Theory (David Reid)
- The Mirror Site (1) - PDF
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Basic Model Theory (Kees Doets)
As the title indicates, this book introduces the reader to what is basic in model theory. A special feature is its use of the Ehrenfeucht game by which the reader is familiarised with the world of models.
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Model Theory (C. Ward Henson)
It is an up-to-date textbook of model theory taking the reader from first definitions to Morley's theorem and the elementary parts of stability theory, introduces the model theory of first-order logic, avoiding syntactical issues not too relevant to model theory.
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Model Theory (Stephen G. Simpson)
This concise introduction to model theory begins with standard notions and takes the reader through to more advanced topics such as saturated and prime models. Concrete mathematical examples are included throughout to make the concepts easier to follow.
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Model Theory, Algebra, and Geometry (Deirdre Haskell, et al)
Tis book gives the necessary background for understanding both the model theory and the mathematics behind the apps, begins with an introduction to model theory, broadens into three components: pure model theory, geometry, and the model theory of fields.
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Model-Theoretic Logics (Jon Barwise, et al)
This book brings together several directions of work in model theory between the late 1950s and early 1980s. It provides an introduction to the subject as a whole, as well as to the basic theory and examples. Many chapters can be read independently.
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Fundamentals of Model Theory (William Weiss, et al)
This book is a concluding discussion focuses on the relationship between proofs and formal derivations, and the role proofs may play as part of a general theory of evidence. It is a primer which will give someone a self contained overview of the subject.
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An Introduction to Set Theory (William A. R. Weiss)
This book covers the basics: relations, functions, orderings, finite, countable, and uncountable sets, and cardinal and ordinal numbers, gives students sufficient grounding in a rigorous approach to the revolutionary results of set theory.
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