Hartley Rogers
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Journal of Symbolic Logic | 1958
Hartley Rogers
In § 1 we present conceptual material concerning the notion of a Godel numbering of the partial recursive functions. § 2 presents a theorem about these concepts. § 3 gives several applications. The material in § 1 and § 2 grew out of attempts by the author to find routine solutions to some of the problems discussed in § 3. The author wishes to acknowledge his debt in § 2 to the fruitful methods of Myhill in [M] and to thank the referee for an abbreviated and improved version of the proof for Lemma 3 in § 2. In the literature of mathematical logic, “Godel numbering” usually means an effective correspondence between integers and the well-formed formulas of some logical calculus. In recursive function theory, certain such associations between the non-negative integers and instructions for computing partial recursive functions have been fundamental. In the present paper we shall be concerned only with numberings of the latter, more special, sort. By numbers and integers we shall mean non-negative integers. Our notation is, in general, that of [K]. If ϕ and ψ are two partial functions, ϕ = ψ shall mean that (∀ x )[ ϕ ( x )≃( ψ x )], i.e., that ϕ and ψ are defined for the same arguments and are equal on those arguments. We consider partial recursive functions of one variable; applications of the paper to the case of several variables, or to the case of all partial recursive functions in any number of variables, can be made in the usual way using the coordinate functions (a) i of [K, p. 230]. It will furthermore be observed that we consider only concepts that are invariant with respect to general recursive functions; more limited notions of Godel numbering, taking into account, say, primitive recursive structure, are beyond the scope of the present paper.
American Mathematical Monthly | 1969
Solomon Feferman; Hartley Rogers
Central concerns of the book are related theories of recursively enumerable sets, of degree of un-solvability and turing degrees in particular. A second group of topics has to do with generalizations of recursion theory. The third topics group mentioned is subrecursive computability and subrecursive hierarchies
The Computer Journal | 1987
Hartley Rogers
American Mathematical Monthly | 1963
Hartley Rogers
American Mathematical Monthly | 1956
Hartley Rogers
American Mathematical Monthly | 1960
Hartley Rogers; Ernest Nagel; James Roy Newman
American Mathematical Monthly | 1975
Hartley Rogers
Journal of Symbolic Logic | 1973
Hartley Rogers
International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology | 1972
Hartley Rogers
Journal of Symbolic Logic | 1970
Hartley Rogers