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121Propositional Quantification in the Topological Semantics for SNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 38 (2): 295-313. 1997.Fine and Kripke extended S5, S4, S4.2 and such to produce propositionally quantified systems , , : given a Kripke frame, the quantifiers range over all the sets of possible worlds. is decidable and, as Fine and Kripke showed, many of the other systems are recursively isomorphic to second-order logic. In the present paper I consider the propositionally quantified system that arises from the topological semantics for S4, rather than from the Kripke semantics. The topological system, which I dub , …Read more
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156The modal logic of continuous functions on the rational numbersArchive for Mathematical Logic 49 (4): 519-527. 2010.Let ${{\mathcal L}^{\square\circ}}$ be a propositional language with standard Boolean connectives plus two modalities: an S4-ish topological modality □ and a temporal modality ◦, understood as ‘next’. We extend the topological semantic for S4 to a semantics for the language ${{\mathcal L}^{\square\circ}}$ by interpreting ${{\mathcal L}^{\square\circ}}$ in dynamic topological systems, i.e., ordered pairs 〈X, f〉, where X is a topological space and f is a continuous function on X. Artemov, Davoren …Read more
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Paradox and paraconsistency: Conflict resolution in the abstract sciences (review)Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 10 (1): 115-117. 2004.
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139Dynamic topological S5Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 160 (1): 96-116. 2009.The topological semantics for modal logic interprets a standard modal propositional language in topological spaces rather than Kripke frames: the most general logic of topological spaces becomes S4. But other modal logics can be given a topological semantics by restricting attention to subclasses of topological spaces: in particular, S5 is logic of the class of almost discrete topological spaces, and also of trivial topological spaces. Dynamic Topological Logic interprets a modal language enrich…Read more
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19Colin oakes/interpretations of intuitionist logic in non-normal modal logics 47–60 Aviad heifetz/iterative and fixed point common belief 61–79 dw mertz/the logic of instance ontology 81–111 (review)Journal of Philosophical Logic 28 661-662. 1999.
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96Shehtman introduced bimodal logics of the products of Kripke frames, thereby introducing frame products of unimodal logics. Van Benthem, Bezhanishvili, ten Cate and Sarenac generalize this idea to the bimodal logics of the products of topological spaces, thereby introducing topological products of unimodal logics. In particular, they show that the topological product of S4 and S4 is S4 ⊗ S4, i.e., the fusion of S4 and S4: this logic is strictly weaker than the frame product S4 × S4. In this pape…Read more
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128Strong completeness of s4 for any dense-in-itself metric spaceReview of Symbolic Logic 6 (3): 545-570. 2013.In the topological semantics for modal logic, S4 is well-known to be complete for the rational line, for the real line, and for Cantor space: these are special cases of S4’s completeness for any dense-in-itself metric space. The construction used to prove completeness can be slightly amended to show that S4 is not only complete, but also strongly complete, for the rational line. But no similarly easy amendment is available for the real line or for Cantor space and the question of strong complete…Read more
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91John Woods. Paradox and paraconsistency: Conflict resolution in the abstract sciences, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, New York, 2003, xviii+ 362 pp (review)Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 10 (1): 116-118. 2004.
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197Dunn’s relevant predication, real properties and identityErkenntnis 47 (1): 37-65. 1997.We critically investigate and refine Dunn's relevant predication, his formalisation of the notion of a real property. We argue that Dunn's original dialectical moves presuppose some interpretation of relevant identity, though none is given. We then re-motivate the proposal in a broader context, considering the prospects for a classical formalisation of real properties, particularly of Geach's implicit distinction between real and ''Cambridge'' properties. After arguing against these prospects, w…Read more
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159The Gupta-Belnap systems ${\rm S}^\#$ and ${\rm S}^*$ are not axiomatisableNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 34 (4): 583-596. 1993.
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74The modal logic of continuous functions on cantor spaceArchive for Mathematical Logic 45 (8): 1021-1032. 2006.Let $\mathcal{L}$ be a propositional language with standard Boolean connectives plus two modalities: an S4-ish topological modality $\square$ and a temporal modality $\bigcirc$ , understood as ‘next’. We extend the topological semantic for S4 to a semantics for the language $\mathcal{L}$ by interpreting $\mathcal{L}$ in dynamic topological systems, i.e. ordered pairs $\langle X, f\rangle$ , where X is a topological space and f is a continuous function on X. Artemov, Davoren and Nerode have axiom…Read more
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
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| Modal Logic |
| Quantified Modal Logic |
| Semantics for Modal Logic |
| Intuitionistic Logic |
| Relevance Logic |
| Liar Paradox |