"Kind of Cl'Ude ~ but it UJorks~ boy~ it UJOrksl" Alan Ner. ueH to Herb Simon~ C1rl'istmas 1955 In 1954 a computer program produced what appears to be the first computer generated mathematical proof: Written by M. Davis at the Institute of Advanced Studies, USA, it proved a number theoretic theorem in Presburger Arithmetic. Christmas 1955 heralded a computer program which generated the first proofs of some propositions of Principia Mathematica, developed by A. Newell, J. Shaw, and H. Simon at RAND Corporation, USA. In Sweden, H. Prawitz, D. Prawitz, and N. Voghera produced the first general program for the full first order predicate calculus to prove mathematical theorems; their computer proofs were obtained around 1957 and 1958, about the same time that H. Gelernter finished a computer program to prove simple high school geometry theorems. Since the field of computational logic (or automated theorem proving) is emerging from the ivory tower of academic research into real world applications, asserting also a definite place in many university curricula, we feel the time has come to examine and evaluate its history. The article by Martin Davis in the first of this series of volumes traces the most influential ideas back to the 'prehistory' of early logical thought showing how these ideas influenced the underlying concepts of most early automatic theorem proving programs.
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"Kind of Cl'Ude ~ but it UJorks~ boy~ it UJOrksl" Alan Ner. ueH to Herb Simon~ C1rl'istmas 1955 In 1954 a computer program produced what appears to be the first computer generated mathematical proof: Written by M. Davis at the Institute of Advanced Studies, USA, it proved a number theoretic theorem in Presburger Arithmetic. Christmas 1955 heralded a computer program which generated the first proofs of some propositions of Principia Mathematica, developed by A. Newell, J. Shaw, and H. Simon at RAND Corporation, USA. In Sweden, H. Prawitz, D. Prawitz, and N. Voghera produced the first general program for the full first order predicate calculus to prove mathematical theorems; their computer proofs were obtained around 1957 and 1958, about the same time that H. Gelernter finished a computer program to prove simple high school geometry theorems. Since the field of computational logic (or automated theorem proving) is emerging from the ivory tower of academic research into real world applications, asserting also a definite place in many university curricula, we feel the time has come to examine and evaluate its history. The article by Martin Davis in the first of this series of volumes traces the most influential ideas back to the 'prehistory' of early logical thought showing how these ideas influenced the underlying concepts of most early automatic theorem proving programs.
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Hardcover. Zustand: Bon. Ancien livre de bibliothèque. Traces d'usure sur la couverture. Edition 1983. Tome 1. Ammareal reverse jusqu'à 15% du prix net de cet article à des organisations caritatives. ENGLISH DESCRIPTION Book Condition: Used, Good. Former library book. Signs of wear on the cover. Edition 1983. Volume 1. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this item's net price to charity organizations. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers E-843-023
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Hardcover. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. 1st. Seller's image, know what you are getting! Pre-packing weight is 1 lb. 15.9 oz . ORIGINAL, NOT A REPRINT OR PHOTOCOPY!! Has NO Dust Jacket. NOTE!! HAS Stencil ink (paint) on covers and margin edges where some intellectual incompetent tried to blot out the library markings for some insane reason! Has all standard Library markings, pocket, labels, stamps, ink, has light tanning throughout, wear and soil to covers noted. Internal hinges are good, Owner markings as noted! See Picture! The Copyright date is 1967 for this 1967 Printing. This volume was purchased through DMRO from the Wright-Patterson Technical Library in the late 1990's at Government public auction. This volume had stuck pages, at the top margins, which were carefully separated. No stuck page edges now, but if any should become re-stuck, they will separate easily! This volume has minor label removal damage at lower spine, otherwise it is an as issued library book. Worst page is 210 which is shown in picture 3. Thank you for your purchase from Sunset Books! Help Promote World Literacy, GIVE a Book as a GIFT!! In stock, Ships from Ohio. WE COMBINE SHIPPING ON MULTIPLE PURCHASES!!!! SEE PICTURES!!!!! ANY ODD/GREEN TONES ON THE SCANS ARE CAUSED BY MY SCANNER!! All of our Technical/Textbook/Ex-Library volumes were obtained legally through Public or Auction sales. Size: 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Ex-Library. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 027233
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Hardcover. Zustand: Good. 1st Edition. 2 VOL SET. Vol 1: Classical Papers on Computational Logic, 1957 - 1966.525 p; many Ill; ISBN 3-540-12043-2. Vol. 2: Classical Papers on Computational Logic, 1967 - 1970.637 p, many Ill; ISBN 3-540-12044-0. [SYMBOLIC COMPUTATION]. Higher postage because books will be shipped as parcel. Buch. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 013020
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