The proof by cases property and its variants in structural consequence relations (Q368486)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6210417
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    The proof by cases property and its variants in structural consequence relations
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6210417

      Statements

      The proof by cases property and its variants in structural consequence relations (English)
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      23 September 2013
      0 references
      The paper studies the different flavors of the proof by cases property in the setting of (not necessarily finitary) abstract algebraic logic. Let \(\nabla(p, q, \vec{r})\) be a set of formulas in two variables \(p, q\) and possible parameters \(\vec{r}\) and \(\phi \nabla \psi\) denotes \(\bigcup\{\nabla(\phi,\psi,\vec{\alpha}) \;| \;\vec{\alpha} \in Fm^{\leq \omega}\}\). Given sets \(\Phi,\Psi \subseteq Fm\), \(\Phi \nabla \Psi\) denotes the set \(\bigcup\{\{\phi \nabla \psi \;| \;\phi \in \Phi, \psi \in \Psi\}\). A parameterized set \((\nabla,p, q,\vec{r})\) of formulas is a p-protodisjunction (or just protodisjunction if \(\nabla\) has no parameters) in a logic \(L\) whenever (PD) \(\quad \quad \phi \vdash_L \phi \nabla \psi \text{ and } \psi \vdash_L \phi \nabla \psi.\) Let \(L\) be a logic, \(\Gamma\) be a set of formulas and \(\phi,\psi, \chi\) be formulas. Then, the following flavors of the proof by cases property (PCP) can be defined: \(\quad\) PCP: if \(\Gamma, \phi \vdash_L \chi\) and \(\Gamma, \phi \vdash_L \chi\), then \(\Gamma, \phi \nabla \psi \vdash_L \chi\) \(\quad\) wPCP: if \(\phi \vdash_L \chi\) and \(\psi \vdash_L \chi\), then \(\phi \nabla \psi \vdash_L \chi\) \(\quad\) fPCP: if \(\Gamma, \phi \vdash_L \chi\) and \(\Gamma, \phi \vdash_L \chi\), then \(\Gamma, \phi \nabla \psi \vdash_L \chi\) for every finite \(\Gamma\) \(\quad\) sPCP: if \(\Gamma,\Phi \vdash_L \chi\) and \(\Gamma,\Psi \vdash_L \chi\), then \(\Gamma,\Phi\nabla \Psi \vdash_L \chi\). \(\nabla\) is a strong p-disjunction (resp. p-disjunction, resp. weak p-disjunction) if it satisfies the sPCP (resp. PCP, resp. wPCP). If \(\nabla\) has no parameters, the prefix `p-' is dropped. Also, a logic \(L\) is strongly (p-)disjunctional (resp. (p-)disjunctional, resp. weakly (p-)disjunctional) if it has a strong (p-)disjunction (resp. a (p-)disjunction, resp. a weak (p-)disjunction). A logic \(L\) is strongly disjunctive (resp. disjunctive, resp. weakly disjunctive) if it has a strong disjunction (resp. a disjunction, resp. a weak disjunction) given by a single parameter-free formula. It is established that all twelve classes of logics defined above are mutually different and form a 12-element meet lattice. In Section 4, a syntactical characterization of (p)-disjuctional logic is given. Section 5 is dedicated to applications.
      0 references
      0 references
      abstract algebraic logic
      0 references
      protodisjunction, abstract algebraic logic
      0 references
      proof by cases properties
      0 references
      consequence relations
      0 references
      filter-distributive logics
      0 references

      Identifiers