Cargando…

Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations

This volume discusses the theoretical foundations of a new inter- and intra-disciplinary meta-research discipline, which can be succinctly called cognitive metamathematics, with the ultimate goal of achieving a global instance of concrete Artificial Mathematical Intelligence (AMI). In other words, A...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Gómez Ramírez, Danny A J
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50273-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2744397
_version_ 1780968619897782272
author Gómez Ramírez, Danny A J
author_facet Gómez Ramírez, Danny A J
author_sort Gómez Ramírez, Danny A J
collection CERN
description This volume discusses the theoretical foundations of a new inter- and intra-disciplinary meta-research discipline, which can be succinctly called cognitive metamathematics, with the ultimate goal of achieving a global instance of concrete Artificial Mathematical Intelligence (AMI). In other words, AMI looks for the construction of an (ideal) global artificial agent being able to (co-)solve interactively formal problems with a conceptual mathematical description in a human-style way. It first gives formal guidelines from the philosophical, logical, meta-mathematical, cognitive, and computational points of view supporting the formal existence of such a global AMI framework, examining how much of current mathematics can be completely generated by an interactive computer program and how close we are to constructing a machine that would be able to simulate the way a modern working mathematician handles solvable mathematical conjectures from a conceptual point of view. The thesis that it is possible to meta-model the intellectual job of a working mathematician is heuristically supported by the computational theory of mind, which posits that the mind is in fact a computational system, and by the meta-fact that genuine mathematical proofs are, in principle, algorithmically verifiable, at least theoretically. The introduction to this volume provides then the grounding multifaceted principles of cognitive metamathematics, and, at the same time gives an overview of some of the most outstanding results in this direction, keeping in mind that the main focus is human-style proofs, and not simply formal verification. The first part of the book presents the new cognitive foundations of mathematics’ program dealing with the construction of formal refinements of seminal (meta-)mathematical notions and facts. The second develops positions and formalizations of a global taxonomy of classic and new cognitive abilities, and computational tools allowing for calculation of formal conceptual blends are described. In particular, a new cognitive characterization of the Church-Turing Thesis is presented. In the last part, classic and new results concerning the co-generation of a vast amount of old and new mathematical concepts and the key parts of several standard proofs in Hilbert-style deductive systems are shown as well, filling explicitly a well-known gap in the mechanization of mathematics concerning artificial conceptual generation.
id cern-2744397
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2020
publisher Springer
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27443972021-04-21T16:45:01Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-030-50273-7http://cds.cern.ch/record/2744397engGómez Ramírez, Danny A JArtificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundationsMathematical Physics and MathematicsThis volume discusses the theoretical foundations of a new inter- and intra-disciplinary meta-research discipline, which can be succinctly called cognitive metamathematics, with the ultimate goal of achieving a global instance of concrete Artificial Mathematical Intelligence (AMI). In other words, AMI looks for the construction of an (ideal) global artificial agent being able to (co-)solve interactively formal problems with a conceptual mathematical description in a human-style way. It first gives formal guidelines from the philosophical, logical, meta-mathematical, cognitive, and computational points of view supporting the formal existence of such a global AMI framework, examining how much of current mathematics can be completely generated by an interactive computer program and how close we are to constructing a machine that would be able to simulate the way a modern working mathematician handles solvable mathematical conjectures from a conceptual point of view. The thesis that it is possible to meta-model the intellectual job of a working mathematician is heuristically supported by the computational theory of mind, which posits that the mind is in fact a computational system, and by the meta-fact that genuine mathematical proofs are, in principle, algorithmically verifiable, at least theoretically. The introduction to this volume provides then the grounding multifaceted principles of cognitive metamathematics, and, at the same time gives an overview of some of the most outstanding results in this direction, keeping in mind that the main focus is human-style proofs, and not simply formal verification. The first part of the book presents the new cognitive foundations of mathematics’ program dealing with the construction of formal refinements of seminal (meta-)mathematical notions and facts. The second develops positions and formalizations of a global taxonomy of classic and new cognitive abilities, and computational tools allowing for calculation of formal conceptual blends are described. In particular, a new cognitive characterization of the Church-Turing Thesis is presented. In the last part, classic and new results concerning the co-generation of a vast amount of old and new mathematical concepts and the key parts of several standard proofs in Hilbert-style deductive systems are shown as well, filling explicitly a well-known gap in the mechanization of mathematics concerning artificial conceptual generation.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:27443972020
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Gómez Ramírez, Danny A J
Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title_full Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title_fullStr Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title_full_unstemmed Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title_short Artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
title_sort artificial mathematical intelligence: cognitive, (meta)mathematical, physical and philosophical foundations
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50273-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2744397
work_keys_str_mv AT gomezramirezdannyaj artificialmathematicalintelligencecognitivemetamathematicalphysicalandphilosophicalfoundations