The Turing machine is one of the simple abstract computational devices that can be used to investigate the limits of computability. In this paper, they are considered from several points of view that emphasize the importance and the relativity of mathematical languages used to describe the Turing machines. A deep investigation is performed on the interrelations between mechanical computations and their mathematical descriptions emerging when a human (the researcher) starts to describe a Turing machine (the object of the study) by different mathematical languages (the instruments of investigation). Together with traditional mathematical languages using such concepts as ‘enumerable sets’ and ‘continuum’ a new computational methodolo...
The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by gro...
We analyze whether Church-Turing thesis can be applied to mathematical and physical systems. We find...
The conventional wisdom presented in most computability books and historical papers is that there we...
The Turing machine is one of the simple abstract computational devices that can be used to...
In this paper we present the problems previously encountered in the academic literature related to T...
AbstractThe paper develops the theory of Turing machines as recognizers of infinite (ω-type) input t...
The importance of algorithms is now recognized in all mathematical sciences, thanks to the developm...
The chapter discusses the concept of Turing-computability from the point of view of mathematical con...
A practical viewpoint links reality, representation, and language to calculation by the concept of T...
AbstractI explore the conceptual foundations of Alan Turing's analysis of computability, which still...
In the early 90’s, mathematicians were tiresome to design an operative computation model headed for ...
DoctoralIn this talk I will review the positions of Church and Post on computability, contrast them ...
Church's and Turing's theses dogmatically assert that an informal notion of effective calculability ...
Universal to systems so various and complex as the foundations of mathematics, cryptography, compute...
The Turing machine halting problem can be explained by several factors, including arithmetic logic i...
The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by gro...
We analyze whether Church-Turing thesis can be applied to mathematical and physical systems. We find...
The conventional wisdom presented in most computability books and historical papers is that there we...
The Turing machine is one of the simple abstract computational devices that can be used to...
In this paper we present the problems previously encountered in the academic literature related to T...
AbstractThe paper develops the theory of Turing machines as recognizers of infinite (ω-type) input t...
The importance of algorithms is now recognized in all mathematical sciences, thanks to the developm...
The chapter discusses the concept of Turing-computability from the point of view of mathematical con...
A practical viewpoint links reality, representation, and language to calculation by the concept of T...
AbstractI explore the conceptual foundations of Alan Turing's analysis of computability, which still...
In the early 90’s, mathematicians were tiresome to design an operative computation model headed for ...
DoctoralIn this talk I will review the positions of Church and Post on computability, contrast them ...
Church's and Turing's theses dogmatically assert that an informal notion of effective calculability ...
Universal to systems so various and complex as the foundations of mathematics, cryptography, compute...
The Turing machine halting problem can be explained by several factors, including arithmetic logic i...
The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by gro...
We analyze whether Church-Turing thesis can be applied to mathematical and physical systems. We find...
The conventional wisdom presented in most computability books and historical papers is that there we...