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228A Meta-model of Access Control in a Fibred Security LanguageStudia Logica 92 (3): 437-477. 2009.The issue of representing access control requirements continues to demand significant attention. The focus of researchers has traditionally been on developing particular access control models and policy specification languages for particular applications. However, this approach has resulted in an unnecessary surfeit of models and languages. In contrast, we describe a general access control model and a logic-based specification language from which both existing and novel access control models may…Read more
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97Products of modal logics, part 1Logic Journal of the IGPL 6 (1): 73-146. 1998.The paper studies many-dimensional modal logics corresponding to products of Kripke frames. It proves results on axiomatisability, the finite model property and decidability for product logics, by applying a rather elaborated modal logic technique: p-morphisms, the finite depth method, normal forms, filtrations. Applications to first order predicate logics are considered too. The introduction and the conclusion contain a discussion of many related results and open problems in the area
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127An irreflexivity lemma with applications to axiomatizations of conditions on tense framesIn Uwe Mönnich (ed.), Aspects of Philosophical Logic: Some Logical Forays Into Central Notions of Linguistics and Philosophy, Dordrecht. pp. 67--89. 1981.
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61Model Theory for Intuitionistic LogicZeitschrift fur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik 18 (4-6): 49-54. 1972.
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177A Comment on Work by Booth and Co-authorsStudia Logica 94 (3): 403-432. 2010.Booth and his co-authors have shown in [2], that many new approaches to theory revision (with fixed K ) can be represented by two relations, , where is a sub-relation of < . They have, however, left open a characterization of the infinite case, which we treat here.
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99Dung’s Argumentation is Essentially Equivalent to Classical Propositional Logic with the Peirce–Quine DaggerLogica Universalis 5 (2): 255-318. 2011.In this paper we show that some versions of Dung’s abstract argumentation frames are equivalent to classical propositional logic. In fact, Dung’s attack relation is none other than the generalised Peirce–Quine dagger connective of classical logic which can generate the other connectives ${\neg, \wedge, \vee, \to}$ of classical logic. After establishing the above correspondence we offer variations of the Dung argumentation frames in parallel to variations of classical logic, such as resource logi…Read more
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119Kripke Saul A.. Semantical considerations for modal logics. Proceedings of a Colloquium on Modal and Many-valued Logics, Helsinki, 23-26 August, 1962, Acta Philosophica Fennica 1963, pp. 83–94Journal of Symbolic Logic 34 (3): 501-501. 1969.
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132On modal logics characterized by models with relative accessibility relations: Part IStudia Logica 65 (3): 323-353. 2000.This work is divided in two papers (Part I and Part II). In Part I, we study a class of polymodal logics (herein called the class of "Rare-logics") for which the set of terms indexing the modal operators are hierarchized in two levels: the set of Boolean terms and the set of terms built upon the set of Boolean terms. By investigating different algebraic properties satisfied by the models of the Rare-logics, reductions for decidability are established by faithfully translating the Rare-logics int…Read more
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98Annotation Theories over Finite GraphsStudia Logica 93 (2-3): 147-180. 2009.In the current paper we consider theories with vocabulary containing a number of binary and unary relation symbols. Binary relation symbols represent labeled edges of a graph and unary relations represent unique annotations of the graph's nodes. Such theories, which we call annotation theories^ can be used in many applications, including the formalization of argumentation, approximate reasoning, semantics of logic programs, graph coloring, etc. We address a number of problems related to annotati…Read more
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Proof theory for fuzzy logics. Applied Logic Series, vol. 36Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 16 (3): 415-419. 2010.
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153Fibred Security LanguageStudia Logica 92 (3): 395-436. 2009.We study access control policies based on the says operator by introducing a logical framework called Fibred Security Language (FSL) which is able to deal with features like joint responsibility between sets of principals and to identify them by means of first-order formulas. FSL is based on a multimodal logic methodology. We first discuss the main contributions from the expressiveness point of view, we give semantics for the language both for classical and intuitionistic fragment), we then prov…Read more
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104Semantic interpolationJournal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 20 (4): 345-371. 2010.The problem of interpolation is a classical problem in logic. Given a consequence relation |~ and two formulas φ and ψ with φ |~ ψ we try to find a “simple" formula α such that φ |~ α |~ ψ. “Simple" is defined here as “expressed in the common language of φ and ψ". Non-monotonic logics like preferential logics are often a mixture of a non-monotonic part with classical logic. In such cases, it is natural examine also variants of the interpolation problem, like: is there “simple" α such that φ ⊢ α …Read more
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105A new version of Beth semantics for intuitionistic logicJournal of Symbolic Logic 42 (2): 306-308. 1977.
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53Goal-directed proof theoryKluwer Academic. 2000.Goal Directed Proof Theory presents a uniform and coherent methodology for automated deduction in non-classical logics, the relevance of which to computer science is now widely acknowledged. The methodology is based on goal-directed provability. It is a generalization of the logic programming style of deduction, and it is particularly favourable for proof search. The methodology is applied for the first time in a uniform way to a wide range of non-classical systems, covering intuitionistic, inte…Read more
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101Reactive Kripke models and contrary to duty obligations. Part A: SemanticsJournal of Applied Logic 11 (1): 103-136. 2013.
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147Uncertainty Rules in Talmudic ReasoningHistory and Philosophy of Logic 32 (1): 63-69. 2011.The Babylonian Talmud, compiled from the 2nd to 7th centuries C.E., is the primary source for all subsequent Jewish laws. It is not written in apodeictic style, but rather as a discursive record of (real or imagined) legal (and other) arguments crossing a wide range of technical topics. Thus, it is not a simple matter to infer general methodological principles underlying the Talmudic approach to legal reasoning. Nevertheless, in this article, we propose a general principle that we believe helps …Read more
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236Extending the Curry-Howard interpretation to linear, relevant and other resource logicsJournal of Symbolic Logic 57 (4): 1319-1365. 1992.