a theory the subject matter of which is another theory. A finding proved in the former that deals with the latter is known as a metatheorem. The most notable example of a metatheory was provided by David Hilbert, a German mathematician, who in 1905 set out to construct an elementary proof of the consistency of mathematics. For this purpose he needed a theory that studies mathematics and has mathematical proofs as the objects to be investigated. Although theorems proved in 1931 by Kurt Gdel, a MoravianU.S. mathematical logician, made it unlikely that Hilbert's program could succeed, his metamathematics became the forerunner of much fruitful research. From the late 1920s Rudolf Carnap, a leading philosopher of science and of language, extended this inquiry, under the headings metalogic and logical syntax, to the study of formalized languages in general. In discussing a formalized language it is usually necessary to employ a second, more powerful language. The former is then known as the object language, whereas the second is its metalanguage.
METATHEORY
Meaning of METATHEORY in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012