Abstract
This little gem is stated unbilled and proved in the last two lines of §2 of the short note Kleene [1938]. In modern notation, with all the hypotheses stated explicitly and in a strong form, it reads as follows:Second Recursion Theorem. Fix a set V ⊆ ℕ, and suppose that for each natural number n ϵ ℕ = {0, 1, 2, …}, φn: ℕ1+n ⇀ V is a recursive partial function of arguments with values in V so that the standard assumptions and hold with. Every n-ary recursive partial function with values in V is for some e. For all m, n, there is a recursive function : Nm+1 → ℕ such that.Then, for every recursive, partial function f of arguments with values in V, there is a total recursive function of m arguments such thatProof. Fix e ϵ ℕ such that and let.We will abuse notation and write ž; rather than ž() when m = 0, so that takes the simpler formin this case ).