Talk:Sequent calculus

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== Two-sided sequent calculus ==
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== Equivalences ==
   
I think the terminology "two-sided sequent calculus" should be used for the system where all the connectives are involved and all the rules are duplicated (with respect to the one-sided version) and negation is a connective.
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Equivalences might deserve a specific page (maybe merged with [[isomorphism]]s and [[equiprovability]]?).
   
In this way, we obtain the one-sided version from the two-sided one by:
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We might imagine a page or some pages giving a collection of [[Provable formulas|valid principles]] of linear logic (with appropriate proofs) and specifying which ones correspond to implications, equivalences or isomorphisms.
* quotient the formulas by de Morgan laws and get negation only on atoms, negation is defined for compound formulas (not a connective)
 
* fold all the rules by <math>\Gamma\vdash\Delta \mapsto {}\vdash\Gamma\orth,\Delta</math>
 
* remove useless rules (negation rules become identities, almost all the rules appear twice)
 
   
A possible name for the two-sided system presented here could be "two-sided positive sequent calculus".
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-- [[User:Olivier Laurent|Olivier Laurent]] 10:39, 15 March 2009 (UTC)
 
-- [[User:Olivier Laurent|Olivier Laurent]] 21:34, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
 

Latest revision as of 21:01, 25 April 2013

[edit] Equivalences

Equivalences might deserve a specific page (maybe merged with isomorphisms and equiprovability?).

We might imagine a page or some pages giving a collection of valid principles of linear logic (with appropriate proofs) and specifying which ones correspond to implications, equivalences or isomorphisms.

-- Olivier Laurent 10:39, 15 March 2009 (UTC)

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