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Pré-Publication, Document De Travail Année : 2023

The predicate of the current mathematical knowledge substantially increases the constructive and informal mathematics and why it cannot be adapted to any empirical science

Apoloniusz Tyszka
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Résumé

We assume that the current mathematical knowledge K is a finite set of statements in the public domain which is time-dependent. This set exists only theoretically. Ignoring K and its subsets, sets exist formally in ZFC theory although their properties can be time-dependent (when they depend on K) or informal. In every branch of mathematics, the set of all knowable truths is the set of all theorems. This set exists independently of K. Algorithms always terminate. We explain the distinction between algorithms whose existence is provable in ZFC and constructively defined algorithms which are currently known. By using this distinction, we obtain non-trivial statements on decidable sets X⊆N that belong to constructive and informal mathematics and refer to the current mathematical knowledge on X. This and the next sentence justify the article title. For any empirical science, we can identify the current knowledge with that science because truths from the empirical sciences are not necessary truths but working models of truth from a particular context. For a set X⊆N whose infiniteness is false or unproven, we define which elements of X are classified as known. No known set X⊆N satisfies Conditions (1)-(4) and is widely known in number theory or naturally defined, where this term has only informal meaning. (1) A known algorithm with no input returns an integer n satisfying card(X)<ω ⇒ X⊆(-∞,n]. (2) A known algorithm for every k∈N decides whether or not k∈X. (3) No known algorithm with no input returns the logical value of the statement card(X)=ω. (4) There are many elements of X and it is conjectured, though so far unproven, that X is infinite. (5) X is naturally defined. The infiniteness of X is false or unproven. X has the simplest definition among known sets Y⊆N with the same set of known elements. We prove that the set X={n∈N: the interval [-1,n] contains more than 29.5+(11!/(3n+1))∙sin(n) primes of the form k!+1} satisfies Conditions (1)-(5) except the requirement that X is naturally defined. 501893∈X. Condition (1) holds with n=501893. card(X∩[0,501893])=159827. X∩[501894,∞)={n∈N: the interval [-1,n] contains at least 30 primes of the form k!+1}. If we add to X some set W satisfying 14≤card(W)≤23, then the following statements hold: X does not satisfy Condition (1), 159827+14≤card(X), the above lower bound is currently the best known, card(X)<ω ⇒ card(X)≤159827+23, the above upper bound is currently the best known, X satisfies Conditions (2)-(5) except the requirement that X is naturally defined. We present a table that shows satisfiable conjunctions of the form #(Condition 1)∧(Condition 2)∧#(Condition 3)∧(Condition 4)∧#(Condition 5), where # denotes the negation ¬ or the absence of any symbol. No set X⊆N will satisfy Conditions (1)-(4) forever, if for every algorithm with no input, at some future day, a computer will be able to execute this algorithm in 1 second or less.
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Dates et versions

hal-01614087 , version 1 (10-10-2017)
hal-01614087 , version 2 (26-11-2017)
hal-01614087 , version 3 (18-12-2017)
hal-01614087 , version 4 (19-03-2018)
hal-01614087 , version 5 (24-03-2018)
hal-01614087 , version 6 (30-10-2018)
hal-01614087 , version 7 (08-01-2019)
hal-01614087 , version 8 (19-06-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 9 (19-07-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 10 (23-07-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 11 (25-08-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 12 (15-09-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 13 (05-10-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 14 (12-10-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 15 (19-10-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 16 (10-12-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 17 (31-12-2020)
hal-01614087 , version 18 (13-01-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 19 (02-02-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 20 (03-03-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 21 (10-03-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 22 (22-10-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 23 (17-11-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 24 (01-12-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 25 (08-12-2021)
hal-01614087 , version 26 (05-01-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 27 (17-02-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 28 (28-02-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 29 (19-07-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 30 (17-08-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 31 (06-09-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 32 (08-11-2022)
hal-01614087 , version 33 (31-08-2023)
hal-01614087 , version 34 (20-09-2023)

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Apoloniusz Tyszka. The predicate of the current mathematical knowledge substantially increases the constructive and informal mathematics and why it cannot be adapted to any empirical science. 2023. ⟨hal-01614087v34⟩
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