[SystemSafety] Faults in maths proofs
Olwen Morgan
olwen at phaedsys.com
Fri Dec 11 16:32:39 CET 2020
Another gem of scepticism from Derek. This time he is due unambiguous
thanks. (There's condescension for you!)
Yet one does not need to turn to complex mathematics to find examples of
potentially perfidious proofs.
Consider the equation: ax^3 e^-x = 1.
With only a little wrangling, it is easy to *see* that this equation has
exactly one root when a = (e/3)^3 . Now, according to Galculator, this
quantity is approximately equal to 0.743908774934. Hence one *expects*
that the equation
0.74391x^3 e^-x has exactly two real roots very close together - as can
be found by numerical solution using Newton's method. ... But the
question now arises as to *what would constitute a rigorous proof* that
this equation has exactly two real roots?
I'll leave this as a teaser for the more mathematically literate on this
list.
Olwen
On 10/12/2020 15:54, Derek M Jones wrote:
> All,
>
> "What is Mathematics?"
> https://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/avigad/meetings/fomm2020/slides/fomm_buzzard.pdf
>
>
> A discussion involving recent examples of 'proofs'
> that may or may not be correct, starting at slide 5.
>
> There is some discussion of the use of programs to create proofs,
> and the problem that software contains faults, just like mathematical
> proofs.
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/pipermail/systemsafety/attachments/20201211/59e0513f/attachment.html>
More information about the systemsafety
mailing list