What is Proof?
Joel David Hamkins, Professor of Logic, Oxford University This lecture is based on chapter 5 of my book, Lectures on the Philosophy of Mathematics, published with MIT Press, https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/lectur... Lecture 5. Proof What is proof? What is the relation between proof and truth? Is every mathematical truth true for a reason? After clarifying the distinction between syntax and semantics and discussing various views on the nature of proof, including proof-as-dialogue, we shall consider the nature of formal proof. We shall highlight the importance of soundness, completeness, and verifiability in any formal proof system, outlining the central ideas used in proving the completeness theorem. The compactness property distills the finiteness of proofs into an independent, purely semantic consequence. Computer-verified proof promises increasing significance; its role is well illustrated by the history of the four-color theorem. Nonclassical logics, such as intuitionistic logic, arise naturally from formal systems by weakening the logical rules.

What is Computability?

Set Theory and the Philosophy of Set Theory

The Gödel incompleteness phenomenon

Ludwig Wittgenstein's Philosophy - John Searle & Bryan Magee (1987)

How did they make this in the 1800's?!

I Gave ChatGPT a Body

Five Stages of Accepting Constructive Mathematics - Andrej Bauer

Climb to Infinity!

Terence Tao: Nobody Understands Why AI Actually Works

Why AI Can Never Escape Turing's 1936 Proof

Geometry — a paragon of mathematical deduction?

What is a number?

The Rise of Rigor in the Calculus

The Most Misunderstood Concept in Math

Richard Feynman - The World from another point of view

Joel David Hamkins: Philosophy of mathematics and truth

What IS a Number? As Explained by a Mathematician

Proofs as Objects: The Second Face of Proof Theory

CIA Whistleblower SPILLS ALL on Jeffrey Epstein, Torture Programs, and Israel

