2,607 research outputs found
Reasoning about Knowledge in Linear Logic: Modalities and Complexity
In a recent paper, Jean-Yves Girard commented that âit has been a long time since philosophy has stopped intereacting with logicâ[17]. Actually, it has no
An Intuitionistic Formula Hierarchy Based on High-School Identities
We revisit the notion of intuitionistic equivalence and formal proof
representations by adopting the view of formulas as exponential polynomials.
After observing that most of the invertible proof rules of intuitionistic
(minimal) propositional sequent calculi are formula (i.e. sequent) isomorphisms
corresponding to the high-school identities, we show that one can obtain a more
compact variant of a proof system, consisting of non-invertible proof rules
only, and where the invertible proof rules have been replaced by a formula
normalisation procedure.
Moreover, for certain proof systems such as the G4ip sequent calculus of
Vorob'ev, Hudelmaier, and Dyckhoff, it is even possible to see all of the
non-invertible proof rules as strict inequalities between exponential
polynomials; a careful combinatorial treatment is given in order to establish
this fact.
Finally, we extend the exponential polynomial analogy to the first-order
quantifiers, showing that it gives rise to an intuitionistic hierarchy of
formulas, resembling the classical arithmetical hierarchy, and the first one
that classifies formulas while preserving isomorphism
Kripke Models for Classical Logic
We introduce a notion of Kripke model for classical logic for which we
constructively prove soundness and cut-free completeness. We discuss the
novelty of the notion and its potential applications
Perspectives for proof unwinding by programming languages techniques
In this chapter, we propose some future directions of work, potentially
beneficial to Mathematics and its foundations, based on the recent import of
methodology from the theory of programming languages into proof theory. This
scientific essay, written for the audience of proof theorists as well as the
working mathematician, is not a survey of the field, but rather a personal view
of the author who hopes that it may inspire future and fellow researchers
Focusing and Polarization in Intuitionistic Logic
A focused proof system provides a normal form to cut-free proofs that
structures the application of invertible and non-invertible inference rules.
The focused proof system of Andreoli for linear logic has been applied to both
the proof search and the proof normalization approaches to computation. Various
proof systems in literature exhibit characteristics of focusing to one degree
or another. We present a new, focused proof system for intuitionistic logic,
called LJF, and show how other proof systems can be mapped into the new system
by inserting logical connectives that prematurely stop focusing. We also use
LJF to design a focused proof system for classical logic. Our approach to the
design and analysis of these systems is based on the completeness of focusing
in linear logic and on the notion of polarity that appears in Girard's LC and
LU proof systems
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