|
Two more FAQ entries: msg#00017science.mathematics.frogs
Hi, it's me again. Two more entries for the FAQ, please comment. In general, do you have any complaint or suggestion for the FAQ page? -Alessio *** Question Aren't proof nets top-down symmetric objects, not differently than proofs in the calculus of structures? *** Answer No, proof nets are top-down asymmetric: they consist of trees with some links on top (in the simplest case of multiplicative linear logic). If you flip a proof net upside-down, you don't get a dual proof net, just an upside-down one. *** Question There is more bureaucracy in the calculus of structures than in the sequent calculus, and this is why you get more properties: simply because you have more stuff to work with, right? *** Answer Wrong, and the answer doesn't even depend on the notion of bureaucracy you use. Since you can design systems in the calculus of structures which completely and faithfully mimic systems in the sequent calculus, the bureaucracy is at worse the same as in the sequent calculus, no matter which notions you use. However, since in the calculus of structures you have access to deep inference, you can design inference rules which are much more efficient than what is possible in shallow inference, and this reduces bureaucracy. This is most prominently testified by the fact that in the calculus of structures there are classes of proofs which are exponentially shorter than proofs of the same sentences in the sequent calculus. |
|
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| Previous by Date: | Re:Wanted: 00017, Alessio Guglielmi |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | Re: Deep inference and speed-up in proof search: 00017, Alessio Guglielmi |
| Previous by Thread: | Finite choice propertyi: 00017, Alessio Guglielmi |
| Next by Thread: | Re: Two more FAQ entries: 00017, Lutz Strassburger |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |
| News | FAQ | advertise |