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Re: Two more FAQ entries: msg#00027

science.mathematics.frogs

Subject: Re: Two more FAQ entries


On Tue, 31 Aug 2004, Alessio Guglielmi wrote:

> Lutz,
>
> I don't understand your remark. Take
>
> +----+ +----+
> | | | |
> a -a a -a
> \ | | /
> \ +---+ / .
> \ /
> \ /
> \ /
> a P -a
>
> How am I supposed to turn around this?

like this:

-a P a
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ +---+ \
/ | | \
-a a -a a
| | | |
+----+ +----+


> Same problem if I remove the
> bottom par,

Yes, it is the same.

> what do I do with the cut link?

it becomes an identity link.

> What do I do if I have
> three conclusions?

you do the same thing.

> The problem addressed by the FAQ is that some people consider proof
> nets top-down symmetric because the identity and cut links look so,
> contrary to the sequent calculus. The point I'm trying to make is
> that this only a very partial symmetry, it's still not perfect.

The reason is that people perceive proof nets in the wrong way, which makes
the symmetry between cut and identity a partial symmetry.

> I also don't understand your final remark. In CoS, you can flip
> around the vertical axis any derivation, not just proofs, while proof
> nets are just proofs, and this is an inherent reason for them to be
> asymmetric.

OK. I did not make myself clear. In order to settle the terminology, let us
forget about proofs, and only talk about derivations (this is what I had in
mind). The example you gave represents a derivation from "1" to "a P -a". By
turning the net arround (as shown above), you get something that represents a
derivation from "a X -a" to "bot". In fact, it is the dual derivation to what
we had before.

> How can it be that the dual of a proof yields the same proof net? The
> dual of a proof is not even a proof!!

Right. The dual of a proof is a refutation. But morally it is the same thing,
and in terms of "proof nets" (maybe the name is misleading) it is represented
by the same object (see above).

> You clearly have something else
> in mind than ordinary proof nets.

This depends on the viewpoint. You can say that ordinary proof nets are
morally different, but technically, we talk about the same objects.

-Lutz




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