Consistent, ω-inconsistent theories Write PA for the theory
Peano arithmetic, and Con(PA) for the statement of arithmetic that formalizes the claim "PA is consistent". Con(PA) could be of the form "No natural number
n is the
Gödel number of a proof in PA that 0=1". Now, the consistency of PA implies the consistency of PA + ¬Con(PA). Indeed, if PA + ¬Con(PA) was inconsistent, then PA alone would prove ¬Con(PA)→0=1, and a reductio ad absurdum in PA would produce a proof of Con(PA). By
Gödel's second incompleteness theorem, PA would be inconsistent. Therefore, assuming that PA is consistent, PA + ¬Con(PA) is consistent too. However, it would
not be ω-consistent. This is because, for any particular
n, PA, and hence PA + ¬Con(PA), proves that
n is not the Gödel number of a proof that 0=1. However, PA + ¬Con(PA) proves that, for
some natural number
n,
n is the Gödel number of such a proof (this is just a direct restatement of the claim ¬Con(PA)). In this example, the axiom ¬Con(PA) is Σ1, hence the system PA + ¬Con(PA) is in fact Σ1-unsound, not just ω-inconsistent.
Arithmetically sound, ω-inconsistent theories Let
T be PA together with the axioms
c ≠
n for each natural number
n, where
c is a new constant added to the language. Then
T is arithmetically sound (as any nonstandard model of PA can be expanded to a model of
T), but ω-inconsistent (as it proves \exists x\,c=x, and
c ≠
n for every number
n). Σ1-sound ω-inconsistent theories using only the language of arithmetic can be constructed as follows. Let
IΣ
n be the subtheory of PA with the induction schema restricted to Σ
n-formulas, for any
n > 0. The theory
IΣ
n + 1 is finitely axiomatizable, let thus
A be its single axiom, and consider the theory
T =
IΣ
n + ¬
A. We can assume that
A is an instance of the induction schema, which has the form ::\forall w\,[B(0,w)\land\forall x\,(B(x,w)\to B(x+1,w))\to\forall x\,B(x,w)]. If we denote the formula ::\forall w\,[B(0,w)\land\forall x\,(B(x,w)\to B(x+1,w))\to B(n,w)] by
P(
n), then for every natural number
n, the theory
T (actually, even the pure predicate calculus) proves
P(
n). On the other hand,
T proves the formula \exists x\,\neg P(x), because it is
logically equivalent to the axiom ¬
A. Therefore,
T is ω-inconsistent. It is possible to show that
T is Π
n + 3-sound. In fact, it is Π
n + 3-
conservative over the (obviously sound) theory
IΣ
n. The argument is more complicated (it relies on the provability of the Σ
n + 2-
reflection principle for
IΣ
n in
IΣ
n + 1).
Arithmetically unsound, ω-consistent theories Let ω-Con(PA) be the arithmetical sentence formalizing the statement "PA is ω-consistent". Then the theory PA + ¬ω-Con(PA) is unsound (Σ3-unsound, to be precise), but ω-consistent. The argument is similar to the first example: a suitable version of the
Hilbert–Bernays–Löb derivability conditions holds for the "provability predicate" ω-Prov(
A) = ¬ω-Con(PA + ¬
A), hence it satisfies an analogue of Gödel's second incompleteness theorem. == ω-logic ==