Metatheorem

In logic, a metatheorem is a statement about a formal system proven in a metalanguage. Unlike theorems proved within a given formal system, a metatheorem is proved within a metatheory, and may reference concepts that are present in the metatheory but not the object theory.

A formal system is determined by a formal language and a deductive system (axioms and rules of inference). The formal system can be used to prove particular sentences of the formal language with that system. Metatheorems, however, are proved externally to the system in question, in its metatheory. Common metatheories used in logic are set theory (especially in model theory) and primitive recursive arithmetic (especially in proof theory). Rather than demonstrating particular sentences to be provable, metatheorems may show that each of a broad class of sentences can be proved, or show that certain sentences cannot be proved.

Examples

Examples of metatheorems include:

gollark: There is also the debate around virii.
gollark: We get taught one for GCSE biology but I think it's not very good as it's quite vague and sort of defines fire and stars as life.
gollark: Well, I'll rephrase that as "I have not heard satisfying and rigorous definitions of it".
gollark: The problem is that people can't seem to come up with... satisfying and rigorous definitions.
gollark: No.

See also

References

  • Geoffrey Hunter (1969), Metalogic.
  • Alasdair Urquhart (2002), "Metatheory", A companion to philosophical logic, Dale Jacquette (ed.), p. 307
  • Meta-theorem at Encyclopaedia of Mathematics
  • Barile, Margherita. "Metatheorem". MathWorld.
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