A Proposed Characterization of p-Simulation Between Theories
Abstract
This paper proposes a characterization of when one axiomatic theory, as a proof system for tautologies, p-simulates another, by showing: (i)~if c.e. theory S efficiently interprets S+φ, then S p-simulates S+φ (Jer\'abek in Pudl\'ak17 proved simulation), since the interpretation maps an S+φ-proof whose lines are all theorems into an S-proof; (ii)~S proves ``S efficiently interprets S+φ'' iff S proves ``S p-simulates S+φ'' (if so, S already proves the 1 theorems of S+φ). To explore whether this framework conceivably resolves other open questions, the paper formulates conjectures stronger than ``no optimal proof system exists'' that imply Feige's Hypothesis, the existence of one-way functions, and circuit lower bounds.
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