Title of article
Classical proof forestry
Author/Authors
Heijltjes، نويسنده , , Willem، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
21
From page
1346
To page
1366
Abstract
Classical proof forests are a proof formalism for first-order classical logic based on Herbrand’s Theorem and backtracking games in the style of Coquand. First described by Miller in a cut-free setting as an economical representation of first-order and higher-order classical proof, defining features of the forests are a strict focus on witnessing terms for quantifiers and the absence of inessential structure, or ‘bureaucracy’.
aper presents classical proof forests as a graphical proof formalism and investigates the possibility of composing forests by cut-elimination. Cut-reduction steps take the form of a local rewrite relation that arises from the structure of the forests in a natural way. Yet reductions, which are significantly different from those of the sequent calculus, are combinatorially intricate and do not exclude the possibility of infinite reduction traces, of which an example is given.
imination, in the form of a weak normalisation theorem, is obtained using a modified version of the rewrite relation inspired by the game-theoretic interpretation of the forests. It is conjectured that the modified reduction relation is, in fact, strongly normalising.
Keywords
proof theory , Classical logic , game semantics , Backtracking games , cut-elimination
Journal title
Annals of Pure and Applied Logic
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Annals of Pure and Applied Logic
Record number
1444484
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