Time and logic: A calculus of binary events (Q1805011)
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English | Time and logic: A calculus of binary events |
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Time and logic: A calculus of binary events (English)
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13 December 1995
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Time is not viewed as a fundamental notion but as a notion deduced from the concept of causality: ``First we introduce the notion of a binary event which generates a bit and thereby marks a point of time. Assuming causality between the binary events allows to map a coherent set of binary events into a simultaneity set of a single point of time. This set provides the base for the definition of an algebra over binary events and a logic over time-bound propositions''. A functional/operational complete and modular method of specification for processing systems can be derived. The modules are able to describe separately the liveness and, respectively, safety properties of the systems. The ``core'' concept introduced here is the so-called bent algebra (and, in fact, also the bent logic). The criticism of other existing time-dependent formalisms for analysing concurrent systems is ``tough'': ``As a conclusion, bent algebra is more general, more expressive and much easier to handle than temporal logics''; only by ``extending time to infinity we can construct a bridge from temporal logic to bent logic''.
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process logic
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computation theory
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three-valued algebra
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specification of processing systems
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causality
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bit
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point of time
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algebra over binary events
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logic over time-bound propositions
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liveness
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safety
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bent algebra
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bent logic
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concurrent systems
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