On modal systems having arithmetical interpretations

1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 935-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnon Avron

We deal here with two modal logics, GL and Grz, that are known to have interesting arithmetical interpretations connected with the notion of provability. GL is the extensiom of K (or K4) by the schema □(□ A → A) → □ A, and Grz is the extension of S4 by □(□(A → □A) →A) → □A. GL is also known to be sound and complete with respect to the class of all Kripke models that are transitive, irreflexive and well founded. Grz bears the same relation to the corresponding reflexive models. We refer the reader to [1] for a full exposition of the subject. (See also [4], [2], [6].)In §I we develop a sequential calculus for both GL and Grz and give a semantical proof that both systems admit cut-elimination. (Incidentally, this provides an easy proof of the semantical completeness of the two systems.) With respect to GL this yields a correction of an error in [2].In §II we show that cut-elimination fails for QGL (the extension of GL to a language with quantifiers). We further show that, despite this failure, QGL still has some of GL's interesting properties (e.g., the disjunction property). We also show, using fixed-point techniques, that similar properties obtain if we take as semantics for QGL the arithmetical interpretation extended in the obvious way.We want to thank Professor H. Gaifman for his help while working on the subject.

Filomat ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 3593-3597
Author(s):  
Ravindra Bisht

Combining the approaches of functionals associated with h-concave functions and fixed point techniques, we study the existence and uniqueness of a solution for a class of nonlinear integral equation: x(t) = g1(t)-g2(t) + ? ?t,0 V1(t,s)h1(s,x(s))ds + ? ?T,0 V2(t,s)h2(s,x(s))ds; where C([0,T];R) denotes the space of all continuous functions on [0,T] equipped with the uniform metric and t?[0,T], ?,? are real numbers, g1, g2 ? C([0, T],R) and V1(t,s), V2(t,s), h1(t,s), h2(t,s) are continuous real-valued functions in [0,T]xR.


1992 ◽  
Vol 16 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 231-262
Author(s):  
Philippe Balbiani

The beauty of modal logics and their interest lie in their ability to represent such different intensional concepts as knowledge, time, obligation, provability in arithmetic, … according to the properties satisfied by the accessibility relations of their Kripke models (transitivity, reflexivity, symmetry, well-foundedness, …). The purpose of this paper is to study the ability of modal logics to represent the concepts of provability and unprovability in logic programming. The use of modal logic to study the semantics of logic programming with negation is defended with the help of a modal completion formula. This formula is a modal translation of Clack’s formula. It gives soundness and completeness proofs for the negation as failure rule. It offers a formal characterization of unprovability in logic programs. It characterizes as well its stratified semantics.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Rashwan A. Rashwan ◽  
Hasanen A. Hammad ◽  
A. Nafea

In this manuscript, the concept of a cyclic tripled type fuzzy cone contraction mapping in the setting of fuzzy cone metric spaces is introduced. Also, some theoretical results concerned with tripled fixed points are given without a mixed monotone property in the mentioned space. Moreover, under this concept, some strong tripled fixed point results are obtained. Ultimately, to support the theoretical results non-trivial examples are listed and the existence of a unique solution to a system of integral equations is presented as an application.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 596-623
Author(s):  
Zhe Lin ◽  
Minghui Ma

Abstract Intuitionistic modal logics are extensions of intuitionistic propositional logic with modal axioms. We treat with two modal languages ${\mathscr{L}}_\Diamond $ and $\mathscr{L}_{\Diamond ,\Box }$ which extend the intuitionistic propositional language with $\Diamond $ and $\Diamond ,\Box $, respectively. Gentzen sequent calculi are established for several intuitionistic modal logics. In particular, we introduce a Gentzen sequent calculus for the well-known intuitionistic modal logic $\textsf{MIPC}$. These sequent calculi admit cut elimination and subformula property. They are decidable.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 720-747
Author(s):  
SERGEY DROBYSHEVICH ◽  
HEINRICH WANSING

AbstractWe present novel proof systems for various FDE-based modal logics. Among the systems considered are a number of Belnapian modal logics introduced in Odintsov & Wansing (2010) and Odintsov & Wansing (2017), as well as the modal logic KN4 with strong implication introduced in Goble (2006). In particular, we provide a Hilbert-style axiom system for the logic $BK^{\square - } $ and characterize the logic BK as an axiomatic extension of the system $BK^{FS} $. For KN4 we provide both an FDE-style axiom system and a decidable sequent calculus for which a contraction elimination and a cut elimination result are shown.


Author(s):  
Manzoor Ahmad ◽  
Akbar Zada ◽  
Xiaoming Wang

AbstractIn this article, we study the existence and uniqueness of solutions of a switched coupled implicit ψ-Hilfer fractional differential system. The existence and uniqueness results are obtained by using fixed point techniques. Further, we investigate different kinds of stability such as Hyers–Ulam stability and Hyers–Ulam–Rassias stability. Finally, an example is provided to illustrate the obtained results.


1973 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 324-330
Author(s):  
Stanley R. Clemens

The direction of future high school geometry courses is currently the subject of much discussion. One frequent suggestion is that high school geometry should be presented with transformation theory as the unifying theme. In support of this new direction, we shall illustrate that transformations can be employed to bring theorems from classical synthetic geometry into the so-called mainstream of modern mathematics. The thread tying these two points of view together will be the application of fixed point theorems.


2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
María López-Ramírez ◽  
Oscar Valero

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document