Timeline of mathematical logic

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A timeline of mathematical logic. See also History of logic.

19th century[]

  • 1847 – George Boole proposes symbolic logic in The Mathematical Analysis of Logic, defining what is now called Boolean algebra.
  • 1854 – George Boole perfects his ideas, with the publication of An Investigation of the Laws of Thought.
  • 1874 – Georg Cantor proves that the set of all real numbers is uncountably infinite but the set of all real algebraic numbers is countably infinite. His proof does not use his famous diagonal argument, which he published in 1891.
  • 1895 – Georg Cantor publishes a book about set theory containing the arithmetic of infinite cardinal numbers and the continuum hypothesis.
  • 1899 – Georg Cantor discovers a contradiction in his set theory.

20th century[]

1950-1999[]

  • 1950 - Boris Trakhtenbrot proves that validity in all finite models (the finite-model version of the Entscheidungsproblem) is also undecidable; here validity corresponds to non-halting, rather than halting as in the usual case.
  • 1952 - Kleene presents "Turing's Thesis", asserting the identity of computability in general with computability by Turing machines, as an equivalent form of Church's Thesis.
  • 1954 - Jerzy Łoś and Robert Lawson Vaught independently proved that a first-order theory which has only infinite models and is categorical in any infinite cardinal at least equal to the language cardinality is complete. Łoś further conjectures that, in the case where the language is countable, if the theory is categorical in an uncountable cardinal, it is categorical in all uncountable cardinals.
  • 1955 - Jerzy Łoś uses the ultraproduct construction to construct the hyperreals and prove the transfer principle.
  • 1955 - Pyotr Novikov finds a (finitely presented) group whose word problem is undecidable.
  • 1955 - develops semantic tableaux.
  • 1958 - William Boone independently proves the undecidability of the uniform word problem for groups.
  • 1959 - Saul Kripke develops a semantics for quantified S5 based on multiple models.
  • 1959 - Stanley Tennenbaum proves that all countable nonstandard models of Peano arithmetic are nonrecursive.
  • 1960 - Ray Solomonoff develops the concept of what would come to be called Kolmogorov complexity as part of his theory of Solomonoff induction.
  • 1961 – Abraham Robinson creates non-standard analysis.
  • 1963 – Paul Cohen uses his technique of forcing to show that neither the continuum hypothesis nor the axiom of choice can be proven from the standard axioms of set theory.
  • 1963 - Saul Kripke extends his possible-world semantics to normal modal logics.
  • 1965 - Michael D. Morley introduces the beginnings of stable theory in order to prove Morley's categoricity theorem confirming Łoś' conjecture.
  • 1965 - Andrei Kolmogorov independently develops the theory of Kolmogorov complexity and uses it to analyze the concept of randomness.
  • 1966 - Grothendieck proves the Ax-Grothendieck theorem: any injective polynomial self-map of algebraic varieties over algebraically closed fields is bijective.
  • 1968 - James Ax independently proves the Ax-Grothendieck theorem.
  • 1969 - Saharon Shelah introduces the concept of stable and superstable theories.
  • 1970 - Yuri Matiyasevich proves that the existence of solutions to Diophantine equations is undecidable
  • 1975 - Harvey Friedman introduces the Reverse Mathematics program.

See also[]

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