On the Uniform Computational Content of Computability Theory
Vasco Brattka, Matthew Hendtlass, Alexander P. Kreuzer

TL;DR
This paper uses the Weihrauch lattice to classify the uniform computational content of various computability-theoretic properties and theorems, revealing most have limited computational influence outside their domain.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework for classifying the computational content of computability-theoretic properties and theorems, highlighting their mostly limited influence in broader mathematical contexts.
Findings
Most properties and theorems are outside the upper cone of binary choice (LLPO)
The low basis theorem is an exception, being discriminative
Some problems can be connected via residual operations, like cohesiveness and PA extensions
Abstract
We demonstrate that the Weihrauch lattice can be used to classify the uniform computational content of computability-theoretic properties as well as the computational content of theorems in one common setting. The properties that we study include diagonal non-computability, hyperimmunity, complete consistent extensions of Peano arithmetic, 1-genericity, Martin-L\"of randomness, and cohesiveness. The theorems that we include in our case study are the low basis theorem of Jockusch and Soare, the Kleene-Post theorem, and Friedberg's jump inversion theorem. It turns out that all the aforementioned properties and many theorems in computability theory, including all theorems that claim the existence of some Turing degree, have very little uniform computational content: they are located outside of the upper cone of binary choice (also known as LLPO); we call problems with this property…
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