145 research outputs found

    An Integrated First-Order Theory of Points and Intervals over Linear Orders (Part I)

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    There are two natural and well-studied approaches to temporal ontology and reasoning: point-based and interval-based. Usually, interval-based temporal reasoning deals with points as a particular case of duration-less intervals. A recent result by Balbiani, Goranko, and Sciavicco presented an explicit two-sorted point-interval temporal framework in which time instants (points) and time periods (intervals) are considered on a par, allowing the perspective to shift between these within the formal discourse. We consider here two-sorted first-order languages based on the same principle, and therefore including relations, as first studied by Reich, among others, between points, between intervals, and inter-sort. We give complete classifications of its sub-languages in terms of relative expressive power, thus determining how many, and which, are the intrinsically different extensions of two-sorted first-order logic with one or more such relations. This approach roots out the classical problem of whether or not points should be included in a interval-based semantics

    Proceedings of the 8th Scandinavian Logic Symposium

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    Conditionals and modularity in general logics

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    In this work in progress, we discuss independence and interpolation and related topics for classical, modal, and non-monotonic logics

    Logical tools for handling change in agent-based systems

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    We give a unified approach to various results and problems of nonclassical logic

    Logics for Dynamics of Information and Preferences: Seminar’s yearbook 2008

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    Mathematical Logic: Proof theory, Constructive Mathematics

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    The workshop “Mathematical Logic: Proof Theory, Constructive Mathematics” was centered around proof-theoretic aspects of current mathematics, constructive mathematics and logical aspects of computational complexit

    Implicit and Explicit Stances in Logic

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