Title: A Reintroduction to Proofs
Speaker: Emily Riehl, Professor of Mathematics, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Abstract: An introduction to proofs course aims to teach how to write proofs informally in the language of set theory and classical logic. In this talk, I’ll explore the alternate possibility of learning instead to write proofs informally in the language of dependent type theory. I’ll argue that the intuitions suggested by this formal system are closer to the intuitions mathematicians have about their praxis. Furthermore, dependent type theory is the formal system used by many computer proof assistants both “under the hood” to verify the correctness of proofs and in the vernacular language with which they interact with the user. Thus, there is an opportunity to practice writing proofs in this formal system by interacting with computer proof assistants such as Rocq or Lean. Equally, intuitions built from an early informal introduction to dependent type theory will make it easier for those who aspire to write computer formalized proofs later on.
Registration for free: https://heilbronn.ac.uk/2025/04/28/london-heilbronn-colloquium-2025-emily-riehl/