Talk:Epsilon calculus

Latest comment: 7 years ago by Lasse Hillerøe Petersen in topic Relation to formal languages?

Bourbaki notation edit

From the article:

This notation is equivalent to the Hilbert notation and is read the same.

Really?   is pronounced "epsilon eks ey"? I find that hard to believe.—Emil J. 15:47, 3 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Good question! The point is that anything you formulate using the   Hilbert style, you can formulate an equivalent statement using the Bourbaki   style.
"Equivalent" here does not mean "  and ...", but it means that there is an effective algorithm to translate notations in finitely many steps.
Hope that helps...—Pqnelson (talk) 16:20, 28 October 2011 (UTC)Reply
Actually, I found this explanation on mathoverflow a 4-step algorithm to translate the   notation to Bourbaki's notation!
(1) Replace this   with  .
(2) Erase the variable that comes right after the  .
(3) Replace all subsequent occurrences of that variable with a box.
(4) Link each of those boxes to the   you wrote in (1). So   becomes   with a link from the   to the boxes (as many boxes as there were  's in  ).
Of course, this is a bit sloppy, but negligibly so. To make it more rigorous, you need to modify these steps to loop over the variables  . But that's implicit. —Pqnelson (talk) 22:39, 28 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

Let's work on our explanation edit

Can someone please explain to me how we might paraphrase   in natural language, in a way that makes it obvious how it is equivalent to  ? Afterwards we can include that explanation in the main article. Thank you. :) --77.204.222.12 (talk) 22:00, 4 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Do you understand why   is equivalent to  ? Then take  :  .—Emil J. 15:24, 6 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Explain the notation to a reader edit

This article assumes that a reader who comes to this page understands what the notation means. It would be extremely useful to the reader of this and other mathematical articles if the mathematical notation is explained step by step, otherwise it just remains abstruse going over their (mine too) heads. If the paragraph under the image of the notation is supposed to be an explanation then it is not doing the job in my opinion.Chandraputra (talk) 08:29, 9 November 2014 (UTC)Reply

Relation to formal languages? edit

The relation to formal languages is quite foggy, if not totally unclear to me. There is a section in the article on formal languages about how they are used to define a language for well-formed formulas and theorems, and I suppose it is in this regard that epsilon calculus works. But there could well be some more and better explanation. --Lasse Hillerøe Petersen (talk) 18:30, 24 April 2017 (UTC)Reply