338,172 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The year of ecology
The keynote speaker comments on the advent of the “Year of Ecology,” with concerns that some of the current environmental rhetoric fails to understand the science behind pest control and the current practices of food production and food processing. In regard to pests, 4tThroughout history man has always made value judgements about other organisms that share our world, and always decides in favor of himself. It is a concern that we will almost certainly lose some of the more useful chemical tools used in pest control, as a result of the emotional concern about pollution, and it is already becoming increasingly difficult to get registration and residue tolerance for new pesticides. All pest control measures are going to continue to be under attack. The solution is to continue to depend up on the scientific method: do basic research, get the facts, and leave emotions out of our decisions, and lastly, speak out
Virtual Evidence: A Constructive Semantics for Classical Logics
This article presents a computational semantics for classical logic using
constructive type theory. Such semantics seems impossible because classical
logic allows the Law of Excluded Middle (LEM), not accepted in constructive
logic since it does not have computational meaning. However, the apparently
oracular powers expressed in the LEM, that for any proposition P either it or
its negation, not P, is true can also be explained in terms of constructive
evidence that does not refer to "oracles for truth." Types with virtual
evidence and the constructive impossibility of negative evidence provide
sufficient semantic grounds for classical truth and have a simple computational
meaning. This idea is formalized using refinement types, a concept of
constructive type theory used since 1984 and explained here. A new axiom
creating virtual evidence fully retains the constructive meaning of the logical
operators in classical contexts.
Key Words: classical logic, constructive logic, intuitionistic logic,
propositions-as-types, constructive type theory, refinement types, double
negation translation, computational content, virtual evidenc
[Book Review of] \u3cem\u3eEthics and Regulation of Clinical Research,\u3c/em\u3e by Robert J. Levine
Rigidity and quasi-rigidity of extremal cycles in Hermitian symmetric spaces
I use local differential geometric techniques to prove that the algebraic
cycles in certain extremal homology classes in Hermitian symmetric spaces are
either rigid (i.e., deformable only by ambient motions) or quasi-rigid (roughly
speaking, foliated by rigid subvarieties in a nontrivial way).
These rigidity results have a number of applications: First, they prove that
many subvarieties in Grassmannians and other Hermitian symmetric spaces cannot
be smoothed (i.e., are not homologous to a smooth subvariety). Second, they
provide characterizations of holomorphic bundles over compact Kahler manifolds
that are generated by their global sections but that have certain polynomials
in their Chern classes vanish (for example, c_2 = 0, c_1c_2 - c_3 = 0, c_3 = 0,
etc.).Comment: 113 pages, 6 figures, latex2e with packages hyperref, amsart,
graphicx. For Version 2: Many typos corrected, important references added
(esp. to Maria Walters' thesis), several proofs or statements improved and/or
correcte
- …
