7,076 research outputs found

    The Self-Undermining Arguments from Disagreement

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    Arguments from disagreement against moral realism begin by calling attention to widespread, fundamental moral disagreement among a certain group of people. Then, some skeptical or anti-realist-friendly conclusion is drawn. Chapter 2 proposes that arguments from disagreement share a structure that makes them vulnerable to a single, powerful objection: they self-undermine. For each formulation of the argument from disagreement, at least one of its premises casts doubt either on itself or on one of the other premises. On reflection, this shouldn’t be surprising. These arguments are intended to support very strong metaphysical or epistemological conclusions about morality. They must therefore employ very strong metaphysical or epistemological premises. But, given the pervasiveness of disagreement in philosophy, especially about metaphysics and epistemology, very strong premises are virtually certain to be the subject of widespread, intractable disagreement—precisely the sort of disagreement that proponents of these arguments think undermine moral claims. Thus, these arguments undermine their own premises. If Chapter 2’s argument is sound, it provides realists with a single, unified strategy for responding to any existing or forthcoming arguments from disagreement

    Proceedings of the Workshop on Linear Logic and Logic Programming

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    Declarative programming languages often fail to effectively address many aspects of control and resource management. Linear logic provides a framework for increasing the strength of declarative programming languages to embrace these aspects. Linear logic has been used to provide new analyses of Prolog\u27s operational semantics, including left-to-right/depth-first search and negation-as-failure. It has also been used to design new logic programming languages for handling concurrency and for viewing program clauses as (possibly) limited resources. Such logic programming languages have proved useful in areas such as databases, object-oriented programming, theorem proving, and natural language parsing. This workshop is intended to bring together researchers involved in all aspects of relating linear logic and logic programming. The proceedings includes two high-level overviews of linear logic, and six contributed papers. Workshop organizers: Jean-Yves Girard (CNRS and University of Paris VII), Dale Miller (chair, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia), and Remo Pareschi, (ECRC, Munich)

    Verifying Programs with Arrays and Lists

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    Automatically verifying safety properties of programs is a tough problem that has been tackled using many different approaches: rewriting systems, abstract interpretation, SMT solving,. .. Most techniques restrict themselves to programs operating on boolean and integer values and transposing them to infinite data structures such as arrays has not yet been satisfyingly achieved. Recent work in Monniaux and Gonnord [2016] suggests the use of abstract interpretation to transpose programs containing arrays into Horn clauses that do not contain arrays. The major innovation of their work is that they use Horn clauses which are more general than programs, to obtain better results. In this work, we first set the work of Monniaux and Gonnord in a more general framework that allows us to extend their abstractions, simplify the expressions they generate, and analyze the precision of their abstraction. Finally we extend their abstractions so that we can the analyze lists and experiments show that we succeed to analyze several classical examples, including sorting algorithms

    Programming and symbolic computation in Maude

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    [EN] Rewriting logic is both a flexible semantic framework within which widely different concurrent systems can be naturally specified and a logical framework in which widely different logics can be specified. Maude programs are exactly rewrite theories. Maude has also a formal environment of verification tools. Symbolic computation is a powerful technique for reasoning about the correctness of concurrent systems and for increasing the power of formal tools. We present several new symbolic features of Maude that enhance formal reasoning about Maude programs and the effectiveness of formal tools. They include: (i) very general unification modulo user-definable equational theories, and (ii) symbolic reachability analysis of concurrent systems using narrowing. The paper does not focus just on symbolic features: it also describes several other new Maude features, including: (iii) Maude's strategy language for controlling rewriting, and (iv) external objects that allow flexible interaction of Maude object-based concurrent systems with the external world. In particular, meta-interpreters are external objects encapsulating Maude interpreters that can interact with many other objects. To make the paper self-contained and give a reasonably complete language overview, we also review the basic Maude features for equational rewriting and rewriting with rules, Maude programming of concurrent object systems, and reflection. Furthermore, we include many examples illustrating all the Maude notions and features described in the paper.Duran has been partially supported by MINECO/FEDER project TIN2014-52034-R. Escobar has been partially supported by the EU (FEDER) and the MCIU under grant RTI2018-094403-B-C32, by the Spanish Generalitat Valenciana under grant PROMETE0/2019/098, and by the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-17-1-0286. MartiOliet and Rubio have been partially supported by MCIU Spanish project TRACES (TIN2015-67522-C3-3-R). Rubio has also been partially supported by a MCIU grant FPU17/02319. Meseguer and Talcott have been partially supported by NRL Grant N00173 -17-1-G002. Talcott has also been partially supported by ONR Grant N00014-15-1-2202.Durán, F.; Eker, S.; Escobar Román, S.; NARCISO MARTÍ OLIET; José Meseguer; Rubén Rubio; Talcott, C. (2020). Programming and symbolic computation in Maude. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming. 110:1-58. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlamp.2019.100497S158110Alpuente, M., Escobar, S., Espert, J., & Meseguer, J. (2014). A modular order-sorted equational generalization algorithm. Information and Computation, 235, 98-136. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2014.01.006K. Bae, J. Meseguer, Predicate abstraction of rewrite theories, in: [36], 2014, pp. 61–76.Bae, K., & Meseguer, J. (2015). Model checking linear temporal logic of rewriting formulas under localized fairness. Science of Computer Programming, 99, 193-234. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2014.02.006Bae, K., Meseguer, J., & Ölveczky, P. C. (2014). Formal patterns for multirate distributed real-time systems. Science of Computer Programming, 91, 3-44. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2013.09.010P. Borovanský, C. Kirchner, H. Kirchner, P.E. Moreau, C. Ringeissen, An overview of ELAN, in: [77], 1998, pp. 55–70.Bouhoula, A., Jouannaud, J.-P., & Meseguer, J. (2000). Specification and proof in membership equational logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 236(1-2), 35-132. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(99)00206-6Bravenboer, M., Kalleberg, K. T., Vermaas, R., & Visser, E. (2008). Stratego/XT 0.17. A language and toolset for program transformation. Science of Computer Programming, 72(1-2), 52-70. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2007.11.003Bruni, R., & Meseguer, J. (2006). Semantic foundations for generalized rewrite theories. Theoretical Computer Science, 360(1-3), 386-414. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.04.012M. Clavel, F. Durán, S. Eker, S. Escobar, P. Lincoln, N. Martí-Oliet, C.L. Talcott, Two decades of Maude, in: [86], 2015, pp. 232–254.Clavel, M., Durán, F., Eker, S., Lincoln, P., Martı́-Oliet, N., Meseguer, J., & Quesada, J. F. (2002). Maude: specification and programming in rewriting logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 285(2), 187-243. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(01)00359-0Clavel, M., & Meseguer, J. (2002). Reflection in conditional rewriting logic. Theoretical Computer Science, 285(2), 245-288. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(01)00360-7F. Durán, S. Eker, S. Escobar, N. Martí-Oliet, J. Meseguer, C.L. Talcott, Associative unification and symbolic reasoning modulo associativity in Maude, in: [121], 2018, pp. 98–114.Durán, F., Lucas, S., Marché, C., Meseguer, J., & Urbain, X. (2008). Proving operational termination of membership equational programs. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 21(1-2), 59-88. doi:10.1007/s10990-008-9028-2F. Durán, J. Meseguer, An extensible module algebra for Maude, in: [77], 1998, pp. 174–195.Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2003). Structured theories and institutions. Theoretical Computer Science, 309(1-3), 357-380. doi:10.1016/s0304-3975(03)00312-8Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2007). Maude’s module algebra. Science of Computer Programming, 66(2), 125-153. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2006.07.002Durán, F., & Meseguer, J. (2012). On the Church-Rosser and coherence properties of conditional order-sorted rewrite theories. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 816-850. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2011.12.004F. Durán, P.C. Ölveczky, A guide to extending Full Maude illustrated with the implementation of Real-Time Maude, in: [116], 2009, pp. 83–102.S. Escobar, Multi-paradigm programming in Maude, in: [121], 2018, pp. 26–44.Escobar, S., Meadows, C., Meseguer, J., & Santiago, S. (2014). State space reduction in the Maude-NRL Protocol Analyzer. Information and Computation, 238, 157-186. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2014.07.007Escobar, S., Sasse, R., & Meseguer, J. (2012). Folding variant narrowing and optimal variant termination. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 898-928. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.01.002H. Garavel, M. Tabikh, I. Arrada, Benchmarking implementations of term rewriting and pattern matching in algebraic, functional, and object-oriented languages – the 4th rewrite engines competition, in: [121], 2018, pp. 1–25.Goguen, J. A., & Burstall, R. M. (1992). Institutions: abstract model theory for specification and programming. Journal of the ACM, 39(1), 95-146. doi:10.1145/147508.147524Goguen, J. A., & Meseguer, J. (1984). Equality, types, modules, and (why not?) generics for logic programming. The Journal of Logic Programming, 1(2), 179-210. doi:10.1016/0743-1066(84)90004-9Goguen, J. A., & Meseguer, J. (1992). Order-sorted algebra I: equational deduction for multiple inheritance, overloading, exceptions and partial operations. Theoretical Computer Science, 105(2), 217-273. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(92)90302-vR. Gutiérrez, J. Meseguer, Variant-based decidable satisfiability in initial algebras with predicates, in: [61], 2018, pp. 306–322.Gutiérrez, R., Meseguer, J., & Rocha, C. (2015). Order-sorted equality enrichments modulo axioms. Science of Computer Programming, 99, 235-261. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2014.07.003Horn, A. (1951). On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras. Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16(1), 14-21. doi:10.2307/2268661Katelman, M., Keller, S., & Meseguer, J. (2012). Rewriting semantics of production rule sets. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 929-956. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.06.002Kowalski, R. (1979). Algorithm = logic + control. Communications of the ACM, 22(7), 424-436. doi:10.1145/359131.359136Lucanu, D., Rusu, V., & Arusoaie, A. (2017). A generic framework for symbolic execution: A coinductive approach. Journal of Symbolic Computation, 80, 125-163. doi:10.1016/j.jsc.2016.07.012D. Lucanu, V. Rusu, A. Arusoaie, D. Nowak, Verifying reachability-logic properties on rewriting-logic specifications, in: [86], 2015, pp. 451–474.Lucas, S., & Meseguer, J. (2016). Normal forms and normal theories in conditional rewriting. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming, 85(1), 67-97. doi:10.1016/j.jlamp.2015.06.001N. Martí-Oliet, J. Meseguer, A. Verdejo, A rewriting semantics for Maude strategies, in: [116], 2009, pp. 227–247.Martí-Oliet, N., Palomino, M., & Verdejo, A. (2007). Strategies and simulations in a semantic framework. Journal of Algorithms, 62(3-4), 95-116. doi:10.1016/j.jalgor.2007.04.002Meseguer, J. (1992). Conditional rewriting logic as a unified model of concurrency. Theoretical Computer Science, 96(1), 73-155. doi:10.1016/0304-3975(92)90182-fMeseguer, J. (2012). Twenty years of rewriting logic. The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming, 81(7-8), 721-781. doi:10.1016/j.jlap.2012.06.003Meseguer, J. (2017). Strict coherence of conditional rewriting modulo axioms. Theoretical Computer Science, 672, 1-35. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2016.12.026J. Meseguer, Generalized rewrite theories and coherence completion, in: [121], 2018, pp. 164–183.Meseguer, J. (2018). Variant-based satisfiability in initial algebras. Science of Computer Programming, 154, 3-41. doi:10.1016/j.scico.2017.09.001Meseguer, J., Goguen, J. A., & Smolka, G. (1989). Order-sorted unification. Journal of Symbolic Computation, 8(4), 383-413. doi:10.1016/s0747-7171(89)80036-7Meseguer, J., & Ölveczky, P. C. (2012). Formalization and correctness of the PALS architectural pattern for distributed real-time systems. Theoretical Computer Science, 451, 1-37. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2012.05.040Meseguer, J., Palomino, M., & Martí-Oliet, N. (2008). Equational abstractions. Theoretical Computer Science, 403(2-3), 239-264. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2008.04.040Meseguer, J., & Roşu, G. (2007). The rewriting logic semantics project. Theoretical Computer Science, 373(3), 213-237. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.12.018Meseguer, J., & Roşu, G. (2013). The rewriting logic semantics project: A progress report. Information and Computation, 231, 38-69. doi:10.1016/j.ic.2013.08.004Meseguer, J., & Skeirik, S. (2017). Equational formulas and pattern operations in initial order-sorted algebras. Formal Aspects of Computing, 29(3), 423-452. doi:10.1007/s00165-017-0415-5Meseguer, J., & Thati, P. (2007). Symbolic reachability analysis using narrowing and its application to verification of cryptographic protocols. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 20(1-2), 123-160. doi:10.1007/s10990-007-9000-6C. Olarte, E. Pimentel, C. Rocha, Proving structural properties of sequent systems in rewriting logic, in: [121], 2018, pp. 115–135.Ölveczky, P. C., & Meseguer, J. (2007). Semantics and pragmatics of Real-Time Maude. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 20(1-2), 161-196. doi:10.1007/s10990-007-9001-5Ölveczky, P. C., & Thorvaldsen, S. (2009). Formal modeling, performance estimation, and model checking of wireless sensor network algorithms in Real-Time Maude. Theoretical Computer Science, 410(2-3), 254-280. doi:10.1016/j.tcs.2008.09.022Rocha, C., Meseguer, J., & Muñoz, C. (2017). Rewriting modulo SMT and open system analysis. Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in Programming, 86(1), 269-297. doi:10.1016/j.jlamp.2016.10.001Şerbănuţă, T. F., Roşu, G., & Meseguer, J. (2009). 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    A debugging model for functional logic programs

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    This paper presents a box-oriented debugging model for the functional logic language ALF. Due to the sophisticated operational semantics of ALF which is based on innermost basic narrowing with simplification, the debugger must reflect the application of the different computation rules during program execution. Hence our debugging model includes not only one box type as in Byrd's debugging model for logic programs but several different kinds of boxes corresponding to the various computation rules of the functional logic language (narrowing, simplification etc.). Moreover, additional box types are introduced in order to allow skips over (sometimes) uninteresting program parts like proofs of the condition in a conditional equation. Since ALF is a genuine amalgamation of functional and logic languages, our debugging model subsumes operational aspects of both kinds of languages. As a consequence, it can be also used for pure logic languages, pure functional languages with eager evaluation, or functional logic languages with a less sophisticated operational semantics like SLOG or eager BABEL

    Nominal Abstraction

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    Recursive relational specifications are commonly used to describe the computational structure of formal systems. Recent research in proof theory has identified two features that facilitate direct, logic-based reasoning about such descriptions: the interpretation of atomic judgments through recursive definitions and an encoding of binding constructs via generic judgments. However, logics encompassing these two features do not currently allow for the definition of relations that embody dynamic aspects related to binding, a capability needed in many reasoning tasks. We propose a new relation between terms called nominal abstraction as a means for overcoming this deficiency. We incorporate nominal abstraction into a rich logic also including definitions, generic quantification, induction, and co-induction that we then prove to be consistent. We present examples to show that this logic can provide elegant treatments of binding contexts that appear in many proofs, such as those establishing properties of typing calculi and of arbitrarily cascading substitutions that play a role in reducibility arguments.Comment: To appear in the Journal of Information and Computatio

    Reserved Indian Water Rights in Riparian Jurisdictions: Water, Water Everywhere, Perhaps Some Drops for Us

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    In this Article, the author explores the question of whether nonfederally recognized eastern Indian tribes can claim reserved tribal rights to water under the Winters doctrine. The urgency of resolving this question in the tribes \u27favor is underscored by the mounting problem of water scarcity in the East, where most such tribes live, and the problems these tribes have in claiming water under the prevailing systems for managing water in that part of the country, riparianism and regulated riparianism. Recognizing that, to date, these rights have been claimed almost exclusively by federally recognized western tribes who live on withdrawn federal lands in states that manage water under the prior appropriation system, the author nonetheless puts forth an array of reasons why these factors should not bar eastern tribes from claiming the same rights. After examining the major features of the three systems for allocating surface flow and the Winters doctrine, the author will show that there are no insurmountable obstacles to the assertion of Winters rights in non-prior appropriation jurisdictions. The author then turns to various normative and utilitarian reasons why eastern tribes should be able to claim these rights. The Article concludes by showing why the artifacts of federal recognition and federal reservations should not pose a barrier to eastern tribes\u27 assertion of their Winters rights
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