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This book takes an idea first explored by medieval logicians 800 years ago and revisits it armed with the tools of contemporary linguistics, logic, and computer science. The idea - the Holy Grail of the medieval logicians - was the thought that all of logic could be reduced to two very simple rules that are sensitive to logical polarity (for example, the presence and absence of negations). Ludlow and Živanović pursue this idea and show how it has profound consequences for our understanding of the nature of human inferential capacities. They also show its consequences for some of the deepest issues in contemporary linguistics, including the nature of quantification, puzzles about discourse ...
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and Related Methods, TABLEAUX 2011, held in Bern, Switzerland, in July 2011.The 16 revised research papers presented together with 2 system descriptions were carefully reviewed and selected from 34 submissions. The papers cover many topics in the wide range of applications of tableaux and related methods such as analytic tableaux for various logics, related techniques and concepts, related methods, new calculi and methods for theorem proving in classical and non-classical logics, as well as systems, tools, implementations and applications; all with a special focus on hardware and software verifications, semantic technologies, and knowledge engineering.
This is the first book-length treatment of hybrid logic and its proof-theory. Hybrid logic is an extension of ordinary modal logic which allows explicit reference to individual points in a model (where the points represent times, possible worlds, states in a computer, or something else). This is useful for many applications, for example when reasoning about time one often wants to formulate a series of statements about what happens at specific times. There is little consensus about proof-theory for ordinary modal logic. Many modal-logical proof systems lack important properties and the relationships between proof systems for different modal logics are often unclear. In the present book we demonstrate that hybrid-logical proof-theory remedies these deficiencies by giving a spectrum of well-behaved proof systems (natural deduction, Gentzen, tableau, and axiom systems) for a spectrum of different hybrid logics (propositional, first-order, intensional first-order, and intuitionistic).
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning, LPAR-17, held in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, in October 2010. The 41 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 133 submissions.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Logic Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning, LPAR 2003, held in Almaty, Kazakhstan in September 2003. The 27 revised full papers presented together with 3 invited papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 65 submissions. The papers address all current issues in logic programming, automated reasoning, and AI logics in particular description logics, proof theory, logic calculi, formal verification, model theory, game theory, automata, proof search, constraint systems, model checking, and proof construction.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning, LPAR 2002, held in Tbilisi, Georgia in October 2002.The 30 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 68 submissions. Among the topics covered are constraint programming, formal software enginering, formal verification, resolution, unification, proof planning, agent splitting, binary decision diagrams, binding, linear logic, Isabelle theorem prover, guided reduction, etc.
This volume contains the papers presented at the Eighth International C- ference on Logic for Programming, Arti?cial Intelligence and Reasoning (LPAR 2001), held on December 3-7, 2001, at the University of Havana (Cuba), together with the Second International Workshop on Implementation of Logics. There were 112 submissions, of which 19 belonged to the special subm- sion category of experimental papers, intended to describe implementations or comparisons of systems, or experiments with systems. Each submission was - viewed by at least three program committee members and an electronic program committee meeting was held via the Internet. The high number of submissions caused a large amount of w...
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second International Conference on Computability in Europe, CiE 2006, held in Swansea, UK, June/July 2006. The book presents 31 revised full papers together with 30 invited papers, including papers corresponding to 8 plenary talks and 6 special sessions on proofs and computation, computable analysis, challenges in complexity, foundations of programming, mathematical models of computers and hypercomputers, and Gödel centenary: Gödel's legacy for computability.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 22th International Conference on Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and Related Methods, TABLEAUX 2013, held in Nancy, France, in September 2013. The 20 revised research papers presented together with 4 system descriptions were carefully reviewed and selected from 38 submissions. The papers cover many topics as proof-theory in classical and non-classical logics, analytic tableaux for various logics, related techniques and concepts, e.g., model checking and BDDs, related methods (model elimination, sequent calculi, resolution, and connection method), new calculi and methods for theorem proving and verification in classical and non-classical logics, systems, tools, implementations and applications as well as automated deduction and formal methods applied to logic, mathematics, software development, protocol verification, and security.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning, LPAR 2008, which took place in Doha, Qatar, during November 22-27, 2008. The 45 revised full papers presented together with 3 invited talks were carefully revised and selected from 153 submissions. The papers address all current issues in automated reasoning, computational logic, programming languages and their applications and are organized in topical sections on automata, linear arithmetic, verification knowledge representation, proof theory, quantified constraints, as well as modal and temporal logics.