352 Pages
    by A K Peters/CRC Press

    This classic introduction to the main areas of mathematical logic provides the basis for a first graduate course in the subject. It embodies the viewpoint that mathematical logic is not a collection of vaguely related results, but a coherent method of attacking some of the most interesting problems, which face the mathematician. The author presents the basic concepts in an unusually clear and accessible fashion, concentrating on what he views as the central topics of mathematical logic: proof theory, model theory, recursion theory, axiomatic number theory, and set theory. There are many exercises, and they provide the outline of what amounts to a second book that goes into all topics in more depth. This book has played a role in the education of many mature and accomplished researchers.

    PREFACE, Dedication, Chapter 1: The Nature of Mathematical Logic, Chapter 2: First-Order Theories, Chapter 3: Theorems in First-Order Theories, Chapter 4: The Characterization Problem, Chapter 5: The Theory of Models, Chapter 6: Incompleteness and Undecidability, Chapter 7: Recursion Theory, Chapter 8: The Natural Numbers, Chapter 9: Set Theory, Appendix The Word Problem, Index

    Biography

    Joseph R. Shoenfield

    " ""classic text is as fresh and useful today as when first published. Noted for the economy of its presentation, it includes a wealth of basic and key results from all parts of mathematical logic."" -Solomon Feferman, Stanford University, January 2001
    ""The book remains an excellent introduction to logic . . . reads as a continuous whole, not a set of isolated topics . . . "" -C. W. Kilmister, The Mathematical Gazette, July 2003"