Bilateralist base-extension semantics with incompatible proofs and refutations
By: Victor Barroso-Nascimento, Maria Osório Costa, Elaine Pimentel
Potential Business Impact:
Keeps math proofs from being wrong.
Logical bilateralism challenges traditional concepts of logic by treating assertion and denial as independent yet opposed acts. While initially devised to justify classical logic, its constructive variants show that both acts admit intuitionistic interpretations. This paper presents a bilateral system where a formula cannot be both provable and refutable without contradiction, offering a framework for modelling epistemic entities, such as mathematical proofs and refutations, that exclude inconsistency. The logic is formalised through a bilateral natural deduction system with desirable proof-theoretic properties, including normalisation. We also introduce a base-extension semantics requiring explicit constructions of proofs and refutations while preventing them from being established for the same formula. The semantics is proven sound and complete with respect to the calculus. Finally, we show that our notion of refutation corresponds to David Nelson's constructive falsity, extending rather than revising intuitionistic logic and reinforcing the system's suitability for representing constructive epistemic reasoning.
Similar Papers
Bilateral base-extension semantics
Logic
Makes logic understand "yes" and "no" separately.
Problems and Consequences of Bilateral Notions of (Meta-)Derivability
Logic in Computer Science
Makes computer logic show proof and disproof.
Base-extension Semantics for Intuitionistic Modal Logics
Logic
Explains how logic rules work by how we use them.