English
Etymology
From complete + -ness.
Noun
completeness (usually uncountable, plural completenesses)
- The state or condition of being complete.
- (logic) The property of a logical theory that whenever a wff is valid then it must also be a theorem. Symbolically, letting T represent a theory within logic L, this can be represented as the property that whenever
is true, then
must also be true, for any wff φ of logic L.
2002, Stephen Cole Kleene, Mathematical Logic, Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, →ISBN, page 314:
- THEOREM 37°. (Gödel's completeness theorem 1930.) In the predicate calculus H:
(a) If
[or even if
-
], then
. If
[or even if
-
], then
.
(b) […]
Synonyms
Antonyms
Derived terms
Translations
state or condition of being complete
- Bulgarian: ця́лостност (bg) (cjálostnost), завърше́ност (bg) (zavǎršénost)
- Catalan: completesa f, completud (ca) f, completitud f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 完整性 (zh) (wánzhěngxìng)
- Czech: úplnost f
- Esperanto: tuteco
- Finnish: täydellisyys (fi), valmius (fi)
- French: complétude (fr) f
- German: Vollständigkeit (de) f
- Greek:
- Ancient: ἐντέλεια f (entéleia)
- Hebrew: שלמות f (shlemut)
- Hindi: पूर्णता (hi) f (pūrṇatā), संपूर्णता f (sampūrṇatā)
- Indonesian: kelengkapan (id)
- Irish: foirfeacht f
- Italian: completezza (it) f
- Polish: całkowitość f, kompletność (pl) f, zupełność (pl) f, pełnia (pl) f
- Portuguese: completidão f, completude (pt) f
- Russian: полнота́ (ru) f (polnotá), завершёность f (zaveršónostʹ), зако́нченнность f (zakónčennnostʹ), це́лостность (ru) f (célostnostʹ)
- Spanish: completitud (es) f, completud f, completez (es) f
- Swedish: fullständighet (sv) c
- Turkish: bütünlük (tr)
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