Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Program Verification : Fundamental Issues in Computer Science - Timothy Colburn

Program Verification

Fundamental Issues in Computer Science

By: Timothy Colburn (Editor), J.H. Fetzer (Editor), R.L. Rankin (Editor)

Paperback | 2 October 2012

At a Glance

Paperback


$489.01

or 4 interest-free payments of $122.25 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

Among the most important problems confronting computer science is that of developing a paradigm appropriate to the discipline. Proponents of formal methods - such as John McCarthy, C.A.R. Hoare, and Edgar Dijkstra - have advanced the position that computing is a mathematical activity and that computer science should model itself after mathematics. Opponents of formal methods - by contrast, suggest that programming is the activity which is fundamental to computer science and that there are important differences that distinguish it from mathematics, which therefore cannot provide a suitable paradigm.
Disagreement over the place of formal methods in computer science has recently arisen in the form of renewed interest in the nature and capacity of program verification as a method for establishing the reliability of software systems. A paper that appeared in Communications of the ACM entitled, `Program Verification: The Very Idea', by James H. Fetzer triggered an extended debate that has been discussed in several journals and that has endured for several years, engaging the interest of computer scientists (both theoretical and applied) and of other thinkers from a wide range of backgrounds who want to understand computer science as a domain of inquiry.
The editors of this collection have brought together many of the most interesting and important studies that contribute to answering questions about the nature and the limits of computer science. These include early papers advocating the mathematical paradigm by McCarthy, Naur, R. Floyd, and Hoare (in Part I), others that elaborate the paradigm by Hoare, Meyer, Naur, and Scherlis and Scott (in Part II), challenges, limits and alternatives explored by C. Floyd, Smith, Blum, and Naur (in Part III), and recent work focusing on formal verification by DeMillo, Lipton, and Perlis, Fetzer, Cohn, and Colburn (in Part IV). It provides essential resources for further study.
This volume will appeal to scientists, philosophers, and laypersons who want to understand the theoretical foundations of computer science and be appropriately positioned to evaluate the scope and limits of the discipline.

More in Artificial Intelligence

The Singularity is Nearer : When We Merge with AI - Ray Kurzweil

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
Supremacy : AI, ChatGPT and the Race that Will Change the World - Parmy Olson
Creative Machines : AI, Art & Us - Maya Ackerman

RRP $57.95

$44.75

23%
OFF
New Beginnings : why change is so difficult and how to achieve it - Stefan Klein
The Tech Coup : How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley - Marietje Schaake
The Shortest History of AI - Toby Walsh

RRP $27.99

$22.75

19%
OFF
Artificial Intelligence : A Modern Approach, 4th Global Edition - Peter Norvig
Genesis : Artificial Intelligence, Hope, and the Human Spirit - Eric Schmidt
Life 3.0 : Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence - Max Tegmark
Handbook of Reinforcement Learning - Todd Mcmullen