The Berry paradox (Q1361183)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    The Berry paradox
    scientific article

      Statements

      The Berry paradox (English)
      0 references
      0 references
      9 June 1998
      0 references
      G. Chaitin, one of the authors of the notion often known as \textit{Kolmogorov complexity}, gives a short popular introduction to his main ideas, by reproducing a presentation that he prepared for a 1974 meeting with Gödel, a meeting which, unfortunately, was cancelled. Gödel's incompleteness result, that no algorithm can check whether a given arithmetic statement is true or false, came from his formalization of the known Liar paradox. In this paradox, a person says ``Everything I said today is false''. If this statement is true, it must be false; if this statement is false, it must therefore be true. Gödel's careful formalization of this statement (outlined in the paper under review) lead not to a paradox but to a proof. Chaitin realized that the same incompleteness result could be obtained by formalizing a different paradox, which was originally proposed by G. G. Berry: ``The first positive integer which cannot be specified in less than a billion words'' should be non-specifiable in less than a billion words, but it has the (above) 14-word specification. Chaitin has shown that not only the formalization of this paradox (in which ``specified'' is formalized as ``computed by a program on a universal Turing machine'') leads to a new proof of Gödel's incompleteness theorem, but also that the resulting formal notion of the smallest length \(C(x)\) of the program (``specification'') that computes (``specifies'') the number \(x\) is an extremely useful notion (this notion \(C(x)\) was also independently discovered by A. Kolmogorov and R. Solomonoff and is often called Kolmogorov complexity).
      0 references
      Berry paradox
      0 references
      Gödel's incompleteness theorem
      0 references
      liar paradox
      0 references
      Kolmogorov complexity
      0 references
      0 references

      Identifiers