Computational Aspects of Linear Logic (Foundations of Computing Series)
โ Scribed by Patrick D. Lincoln
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 232
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Linear logic, first introduced by Jean-Yves Girard in 1987 as a resource-conscious logic, is a refinement of classical logic that has now matured into a rich area of active research that includes linear logic semantics, proof theory, complexity, and applications to the theory of concurrent and distributed systems. This monograph investigates several issues in the proof theory of linear logic, showing that linear logic is a computational logic behind logics, that is about computation rather than about "Truth". In addressing both complexity and programming language issues, Lincoln's main theoretical concern is to strengthen the conceptual underpinnings necessary to apply proof theory to reason about computation. The principal contribution is the author's investigation of two computational interpretations of linear logic. He first demonstrates the power of a correspondence, advocated by Girard, between proofs and computations. Lincoln next revisits the Curry-Howard correpondence between proofs and programmes, originally observed for intuitionistic logic, and shows that linear logic adds a greater degree of control over the resource-usage of programmes.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
We give a self-contained exposition of Mayr & Meyer's example of a polynomial ideal exhibiting double exponential degrees for the ideal membership problem, and generalise this example to exhibit minimal syzygies of double exponential degree. This demonstrates the existence of subschemes of projectiv
<p>Many devices (we say dynamical systems or simply systems) behave like black boxes: they receive an input, this input is transformed following some laws (usually a differential equation) and an output is observed. The problem is to regulate the input in order to control the output, that is for obt
We are happy to present the reader with volume 1 of our book on temporal logic. Work on this volume was begun in 1979 by Dov Gabbay, who prepared a draft manuscript [Gabbay, 1981c] which covered earlier versions of chapters 1-3, 6-11, and 13. The 1981 manuscript was intended as a research m
This is the second volume in a series of well-respected works in temporal science and is by the same authors as the first. Volume one dealt primarily with basic concepts and methods, volume two discuses the more applicable aspects of temporal logics. The first four chapters continue the more theore
Now in a new edition!--the classic presentation of the theory of computable functions in the context of the foundations of mathematics. Part I motivates the study of computability with discussions and readings about the crisis in the foundations of mathematics in the early 20th century, while pre