This subdirectory serves two purposes.  First, its members sup-
plement the test problems supplied by Bill McCune.  Second, its
members provide a beginning for studying various fields of
mathematics and logic.  Currently, as of 01-21-94, all members
are input files and summaries of the corresponding output files.
For additional input files, output files, statistics, research
topics, and more, see the book to be published by Larry Wos,
"Automating the Search for Elegant Proofs: An Experimenter's
Notebook".

The following briefly describes the possible use for the respec-
tive input files.  The files feature the use of the resonance
strategy, but other strategies are used.  They contain options
commented out with % that can be used by removing the %.

grp_exp3.in --- can be used to study a given single axiom for
groups of exponent 3, those groups in which the third power of
all elements x is the identity e.

grp_exp4.in --- can be used to study a given single axiom for
groups of exponent 4, those in which the fourth power of every
element x is the identity e.

robbins.in --- can be used to study Robbins algebra in the context
of proving such an algebra is Boolean when one adjoins to its ax-
ioms the equation c+c = c.

twoval.in --- can be used to study two-valued or propositional cal-
culus.

mayval.in --- can be used to study may-valued calculus.  The file
includes a very difficult theorem to prove, MV5.  If one wishes
to attempt its proof, one must change the assigned limit on
max_proofs from 4 to 5.

cursory.in --- can be used to proof check a given
proof, but in a cursory manner rather than in a rigorous manner.
In cursory proof checking, OTTER is not forced to produce a proof
that is consistent with the precise history of the given proof
being checked.  In rigorous proof checking, by supplying the pre-
cise history of the proof being checked (with appropriate demodu-
lators), OTTER is forced to attempt to duplicate the given proof.

rigorous.in --- can be used to rigorously check a
given proof.  See the comments accompanying
cursory.proof.checking.in for pertinent detail.

Welcome are questions on these files, e-mailed to wos@mcs.anl.gov
or phone 312-493-0767 (home), or 708-252-7224 (office).  Even
more welcome are open questions and unsolved problems.















