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Input value for which an existential statement of a function is true
In mathematical logic, a witness is a specific value t to be substituted for variable x of an existential statement of the form ∃x φ(x) such that φ(t) is true.
For example, a theory T of arithmetic is said to be inconsistent if there exists a proof in T of the formula "0 = 1". The formula I(T), which says that T is inconsistent, is thus an existential formula. A witness for the inconsistency of T is a particular proof of "0 = 1" in T.
Boolos, Burgess, and Jeffrey (2002:81) define the notion of a witness with the example, in which S is an n-place relation on natural numbers, R is an (n+1)-place recursive relation, and ↔ indicates logical equivalence (if and only if):
In this particular example, the authors defined s to be (positively) recursively semidecidable, or simply semirecursive.
In predicate calculus, a Henkin witness for a sentence ∃ x φ ( x ) {\displaystyle \exists x\,\varphi (x)} in a theory T is a term c such that T proves φ(c) (Hinman 2005:196). The use of such witnesses is a key technique in the proof of Gödel's completeness theorem presented by Leon Henkin in 1949.
Relation to game semantics[edit]The notion of witness leads to the more general idea of game semantics. In the case of sentence ∃ x φ ( x ) {\displaystyle \exists x\,\varphi (x)} the winning strategy for the verifier is to pick a witness for φ {\displaystyle \varphi } . For more complex formulas involving universal quantifiers, the existence of a winning strategy for the verifier depends on the existence of appropriate Skolem functions. For example, if S denotes ∀ x ∃ y φ ( x , y ) {\displaystyle \forall x\,\exists y\,\varphi (x,y)} then an equisatisfiable statement for S is ∃ f ∀ x φ ( x , f ( x ) ) {\displaystyle \exists f\,\forall x\,\varphi (x,f(x))} . The Skolem function f (if it exists) actually codifies a winning strategy for the verifier of S by returning a witness for the existential sub-formula for every choice of x the falsifier might make.
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