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On bar recursion of types 0 and 1
For general information on bar recursion the reader should consult the papers of Spector [8], where it was introduced, Howard [2] and Tait [11]. In this note we shall prove that the terms of Godel's theory T (in its extensional version of Spector [8]) are closed under the rule BRo•1 of bar recursion of types 0 and 1. Our method of proof is based on the notion of an infinite term introduced by Tait [9]. The main tools of the proof are (i) the normalization theorem for (notations for) infinite terms and (ii) valuation functionals. Both are elaborated in [6]; for brevity some familiarity with this paper is assumed here. Using (i) and (ii) we reduce BRo.1 to ';-recursion with'; < co. From this the result follows by work of Tait [10], who gave a reduction of 2E-recursion to ';-recursion at a higher type. At the end of the paper we discuss a perhaps more natural variant of bar recursion introduced by Kreisel in [4]. Related results are due to rKeisel (in his appendix to [8]), who obtains results which imply, using the reduction given by Howard [2] of the constant of bar recursion of type '0 to the rule of bar recursion of type (0 ~ '0) ~ '0, that T is not closed under the rule of bar recursion of a type of level ~ 2, to Diller [1], who gave a reduction of BRo.1 to ';-recursion with'; bounded by the least (V-critical number, and to Howard [3], who gave an ordinal analysis of the constant of bar recursion of type O. I am grateful to H. Barendregt, W. Howard and G. Kreisel for many useful comments and discussions. Recall that a functional F of type 0 ~ (0 ~ '0) ~ (J is said to be defined by (the rule of) bar recursion of type '0 from Yand functionals G, H of the proper types i
Some applications of logic to feasibility in higher types
In this paper we demonstrate that the class of basic feasible functionals has
recursion theoretic properties which naturally generalize the corresponding
properties of the class of feasible functions. We also improve the Kapron -
Cook result on mashine representation of basic feasible functionals. Our proofs
are based on essential applications of logic. We introduce a weak fragment of
second order arithmetic with second order variables ranging over functions from
N into N which suitably characterizes basic feasible functionals, and show that
it is a useful tool for investigating the properties of basic feasible
functionals. In particular, we provide an example how one can extract feasible
"programs" from mathematical proofs which use non-feasible functionals (like
second order polynomials)
A Bi-Hamiltonian Formulation for Triangular Systems by Perturbations
A bi-Hamiltonian formulation is proposed for triangular systems resulted by
perturbations around solutions, from which infinitely many symmetries and
conserved functionals of triangular systems can be explicitly constructed,
provided that one operator of the Hamiltonian pair is invertible. Through our
formulation, four examples of triangular systems are exhibited, which also show
that bi-Hamiltonian systems in both lower dimensions and higher dimensions are
many and varied. Two of four examples give local 2+1 dimensional bi-Hamiltonian
systems and illustrate that multi-scale perturbations can lead to
higher-dimensional bi-Hamiltonian systems.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in J. Math. Phy
Inversion, Iteration, and the Art of Dual Wielding
The humble ("dagger") is used to denote two different operations in
category theory: Taking the adjoint of a morphism (in dagger categories) and
finding the least fixed point of a functional (in categories enriched in
domains). While these two operations are usually considered separately from one
another, the emergence of reversible notions of computation shows the need to
consider how the two ought to interact. In the present paper, we wield both of
these daggers at once and consider dagger categories enriched in domains. We
develop a notion of a monotone dagger structure as a dagger structure that is
well behaved with respect to the enrichment, and show that such a structure
leads to pleasant inversion properties of the fixed points that arise as a
result. Notably, such a structure guarantees the existence of fixed point
adjoints, which we show are intimately related to the conjugates arising from a
canonical involutive monoidal structure in the enrichment. Finally, we relate
the results to applications in the design and semantics of reversible
programming languages.Comment: Accepted for RC 201
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