"The Sequencing of the Mathematical Genome"
"We may be close to seeing how computers, rather than humans, would do 
mathematics":

  Proof by computer: Harnessing the power of computers to verify mathematical 
proofs, EurekAlert: New computer tools have the potential to revolutionize the 
practice of mathematics by providing far more-reliable proofs of mathematical 
results than have ever been possible in the history of humankind. These 
computer tools, based on the notion of "formal proof", have in recent years 
been used to provide nearly infallible proofs of many important results in 
mathematics. A ground-breaking collection of four articles by leading experts, 
published today in the Notices of the American Mathematical Society, explores 
new developments in the use of formal proof in mathematics.

  When mathematicians prove theorems in the traditional way, they present the 
argument in narrative form. They assume previous results, they gloss over 
details they think other experts will understand, they take shortcuts to make 
the presentation less tedious, they appeal to intuition, etc. The correctness 
of the arguments is determined by the scrutiny of other mathematicians, in 
informal discussions, in lectures, or in journals. It is sobering to realize 
that the means by which mathematical results are verified is essentially a 
social process and is thus fallible. When it comes to central, well known 
results, the proofs are especially well checked and errors are eventually 
found. Nevertheless the history of mathematics has many stories about false 
results that went undetected for a long time. In addition, in some recent 
cases, important theorems have required such long and complicated proofs that 
very few people have the time, energy, and necessary background to check 
through them. And some proofs contain extensive computer code to, for example, 
check a lot of cases that would be infeasible to check by hand. How can 
mathematicians be sure that such proofs are reliable?

  To get around these problems, computer scientists and mathematicians began to 
develop the field of formal proof. A formal proof is one in which every logical 
inference has been checked all the way back to the fundamental axioms of 
mathematics. Mathematicians do not usually write formal proofs because such 
proofs are so long and cumbersome that it would be impossible to have them 
checked by human mathematicians. But now one can get "computer proof 
assistants" to do the checking. In recent years, computer proof assistants have 
become powerful enough to handle difficult proofs.

  Only in simple cases can one feed a statement to a computer proof assistant 
and expect it to hand over a proof. Rather, the mathematician has to know how 
to prove the statement; the proof then is greatly expanded into the special 
syntax of formal proof, with every step spelled out, and it is this formal 
proof that the computer checks. It is also possible to let computers loose to 
explore mathematics on their own, and in some cases they have come up with 
interesting conjectures that went unnoticed by mathematicians. We may be close 
to seeing how computers, rather than humans, would do mathematics.

  The four Notices articles explore the current state of the art of formal 
proof and provide practical guidance for using computer proof assistants. If 
the use of these assistants becomes widespread, they could change deeply 
mathematics as it is currently practiced. One long-term dream is to have formal 
proofs of all of the central theorems in mathematics. Thomas Hales, one of the 
authors writing in the Notices, says that such a collection of proofs would be 
akin to "the sequencing of the mathematical genome".

  The articles appear today in the December 2008 issue of the Notices and are 
freely available at http://www.ams.org/notices.



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agi
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