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Main Author: d'Aragona, Antonio Piccolomini
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.03298
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author d'Aragona, Antonio Piccolomini
author_facet d'Aragona, Antonio Piccolomini
contents I explore the relationships between Prawitz's approach to non-monotonic proof-theoretic validity, which I call reducibility semantics, and some later proof-theoretic approaches, which I call standard base semantics and Sandqvist's base semantics respectively. I show that, if suitable conditions are met, reducibility semantics and standard base semantics are equivalent, and that, if Sandqvist's variant is complete over reducibility semantics, then also the inverse holds. Finally, notions of "point-wise" soundness and completeness (called base-soundness and base-completeness) are discussed against some known principles from the proof-theoretic literature, as well as against monotonic proof-theoretic semantics. Intuitionistic logic is proved not to be "point-wise" complete on any kind of non-monotonic proof-theoretic semantics. The way in which this result is proved, as well as the overall behaviour of "point-wise" soundness and completeness, is significantly different in the non-monotonic framework as compared to what happens in the monotonic one - where the notions at issue can be used too to prove the "point-wise" incompleteness of intuitionistic logic.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_03298
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Some results in non-monotonic proof-theoretic semantics
d'Aragona, Antonio Piccolomini
Logic
I explore the relationships between Prawitz's approach to non-monotonic proof-theoretic validity, which I call reducibility semantics, and some later proof-theoretic approaches, which I call standard base semantics and Sandqvist's base semantics respectively. I show that, if suitable conditions are met, reducibility semantics and standard base semantics are equivalent, and that, if Sandqvist's variant is complete over reducibility semantics, then also the inverse holds. Finally, notions of "point-wise" soundness and completeness (called base-soundness and base-completeness) are discussed against some known principles from the proof-theoretic literature, as well as against monotonic proof-theoretic semantics. Intuitionistic logic is proved not to be "point-wise" complete on any kind of non-monotonic proof-theoretic semantics. The way in which this result is proved, as well as the overall behaviour of "point-wise" soundness and completeness, is significantly different in the non-monotonic framework as compared to what happens in the monotonic one - where the notions at issue can be used too to prove the "point-wise" incompleteness of intuitionistic logic.
title Some results in non-monotonic proof-theoretic semantics
topic Logic
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.03298