45 research outputs found
Let's plan it deductively!
AbstractThe paper describes a transition logic, TL, and a deductive formalism for it. It shows how various important aspects (such as ramification, qualification, specificity, simultaneity, indeterminism etc.) involved in planning (or in reasoning about action and causality for that matter) can be modelled in TL in a rather natural way. (The deductive formalism for) TL extends the linear connection method proposed earlier by the author by embedding the latter into classical logic, so that classical and resource-sensitive reasoning coexist within TL. The attraction of a logical and deductive approach to planning is emphasized and the state of automated deduction briefly described
Range-Restricted Interpolation through Clausal Tableaux
We show how variations of range-restriction and also the Horn property can be
passed from inputs to outputs of Craig interpolation in first-order logic. The
proof system is clausal tableaux, which stems from first-order ATP. Our results
are induced by a restriction of the clausal tableau structure, which can be
achieved in general by a proof transformation, also if the source proof is by
resolution/paramodulation. Primarily addressed applications are query synthesis
and reformulation with interpolation. Our methodical approach combines
operations on proof structures with the immediate perspective of feasible
implementation through incorporating highly optimized first-order provers
Set of support, demodulation, paramodulation: a historical perspective
This article is a tribute to the scientific legacy of automated reasoning pioneer and JAR founder Lawrence T. (Larry) Wos. Larry's main technical contributions were the set-of-support strategy for resolution theorem proving, and the demodulation and paramodulation inference rules for building equality into resolution. Starting from the original definitions of these concepts in Larry's papers, this survey traces their evolution, unearthing the often forgotten trails that connect Larry's original definitions to those that became standard in the field