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Structural rule

In the logical discipline of proof theory, a structural rule is an inference rule of a sequent calculus that does not refer to any logical connective but instead operates on the sequents directly. Structural rules often mimic the intended meta-theoretic properties of the logic. Logics that deny one or more of the structural rules are classified as substructural logics.

Common structural rules edit

Three common structural rules are:

  • Weakening, where the hypotheses or conclusion of a sequence may be extended with additional members. In symbolic form weakening rules can be written as   on the left of the turnstile, and   on the right. Known as monotonicity of entailment in classical logic.
  • Contraction, where two equal (or unifiable) members on the same side of a sequent may be replaced by a single member (or common instance). Symbolically:   and  . Also known as factoring in automated theorem proving systems using resolution. Known as idempotency of entailment in classical logic.
  • Exchange, where two members on the same side of a sequent may be swapped. Symbolically:   and  . (This is also known as the permutation rule.)

A logic without any of the above structural rules would interpret the sides of a sequent as pure sequences; with exchange, they can be considered to be multisets; and with both contraction and exchange they can be considered to be sets.

These are not the only possible structural rules. A famous structural rule is known as cut. Considerable effort is spent by proof theorists in showing that cut rules are superfluous in various logics. More precisely, what is shown is that cut is only (in a sense) a tool for abbreviating proofs, and does not add to the theorems that can be proved. The successful 'removal' of cut rules, known as cut elimination, is directly related to the philosophy of computation as normalization (see Curry–Howard correspondence); it often gives a good indication of the complexity of deciding a given logic.

See also edit

structural, rule, type, rule, used, linguistics, phrase, structure, rule, this, article, does, cite, sources, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers,. For the type of rule used in linguistics see phrase structure rule This article does not cite any sources Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Structural rule news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the logical discipline of proof theory a structural rule is an inference rule of a sequent calculus that does not refer to any logical connective but instead operates on the sequents directly Structural rules often mimic the intended meta theoretic properties of the logic Logics that deny one or more of the structural rules are classified as substructural logics Common structural rules editThree common structural rules are Weakening where the hypotheses or conclusion of a sequence may be extended with additional members In symbolic form weakening rules can be written as G S G A S displaystyle frac Gamma vdash Sigma Gamma A vdash Sigma nbsp on the left of the turnstile and G S G S A displaystyle frac Gamma vdash Sigma Gamma vdash Sigma A nbsp on the right Known as monotonicity of entailment in classical logic Contraction where two equal or unifiable members on the same side of a sequent may be replaced by a single member or common instance Symbolically G A A S G A S displaystyle frac Gamma A A vdash Sigma Gamma A vdash Sigma nbsp and G A A S G A S displaystyle frac Gamma vdash A A Sigma Gamma vdash A Sigma nbsp Also known as factoring in automated theorem proving systems using resolution Known as idempotency of entailment in classical logic Exchange where two members on the same side of a sequent may be swapped Symbolically G 1 A G 2 B G 3 S G 1 B G 2 A G 3 S displaystyle frac Gamma 1 A Gamma 2 B Gamma 3 vdash Sigma Gamma 1 B Gamma 2 A Gamma 3 vdash Sigma nbsp and G S 1 A S 2 B S 3 G S 1 B S 2 A S 3 displaystyle frac Gamma vdash Sigma 1 A Sigma 2 B Sigma 3 Gamma vdash Sigma 1 B Sigma 2 A Sigma 3 nbsp This is also known as the permutation rule A logic without any of the above structural rules would interpret the sides of a sequent as pure sequences with exchange they can be considered to be multisets and with both contraction and exchange they can be considered to be sets These are not the only possible structural rules A famous structural rule is known as cut Considerable effort is spent by proof theorists in showing that cut rules are superfluous in various logics More precisely what is shown is that cut is only in a sense a tool for abbreviating proofs and does not add to the theorems that can be proved The successful removal of cut rules known as cut elimination is directly related to the philosophy of computation as normalization see Curry Howard correspondence it often gives a good indication of the complexity of deciding a given logic See also editAffine logic substructural logic whose proof theory rejects the structural rule of contractionPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Linear logic System of resource aware logic Ordered logic linear logic Relevance logic mathematical logic system that imposes certain restrictions on implicationPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Separation logic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Structural rule amp oldid 1181159240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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