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For all , there exists a
such that the
th term of the Goodstein Sequence
. In other words, every
Goodstein Sequence converges to 0.
The secret underlying Goodstein's theorem is that the Hereditary Representation of in base
mimics an
ordinal notation for ordinals less than some number. For such ordinals, the base bumping operation leaves the ordinal fixed
whereas the subtraction of one decreases the ordinal. But these ordinals are well-ordered, and this allows us to conclude
that a Goodstein sequence eventually converges to zero.
Goodstein's theorem cannot be proved in Peano Arithmetic (i.e., formal Number Theory).
See also Natural Independence Phenomenon, Peano Arithmetic