Toward a Characterization of Simulation Between Arithmetic Theories
Hunter Monroe

TL;DR
This paper investigates when arithmetic theories can efficiently prove bounded consistency statements of extended theories, proposing that relative consistency strength governs simulation capabilities.
Contribution
It provides unconditional constraints on simulation between theories and conjectures that relative consistency strength is the key criterion.
Findings
If a theory proves certain consistency implications, it interprets the extended theory.
Failure to simulate implies unprovability of certain Busy Beaver related statements.
Proposes that relative consistency strength is necessary and sufficient for simulation.
Abstract
We study when a sound arithmetic theory with polynomial-time decidable axioms efficiently proves the bounded consistency statements for a true sentence . Equivalently, we ask when , viewed as a proof system, simulates . The paper's two unconditional contributions constrain possible characterizations. First, for finitely axiomatized sequential , if , then interprets , implying for some polynomial , and hence . Second, if fails to simulate for some true , then for all sufficiently large it…
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