•  36
    This edited collection bridges the foundations and practice of constructive mathematics and focuses on the contrast between the theoretical developments, which have been most useful for computer science (ie: constructive set and type theories), and more specific efforts on constructive analysis, algebra and topology. Aimed at academic logician, mathematicians, philosophers and computer scientists with contributions from leading researchers, it is up to date, highly topical and broad in scope
  •  3
    Preface
    with Ulrich Berger, Hannes Diener, and Monika Seisenberger
    In Ulrich Berger, Hannes Diener, Peter Schuster & Monika Seisenberger (eds.), Logic, Construction, Computation, De Gruyter. pp. 2-4. 2012.
  •  5
    Logic, Construction, Computation (edited book)
    with Ulrich Berger, Hannes Diener, and Monika Seisenberger
    De Gruyter. 2012.
    Over the last few decades the interest of logicians and mathematicians in constructive and computational aspects of their subjects has been steadily growing, and researchers from disparate areas realized that they can benefit enormously from the mutual exchange of techniques concerned with those aspects. A key figure in this exciting development is the logician and mathematician Helmut Schwichtenberg to whom this volume is dedicated on the occasion of his 70th birthday and his turning emeritus. …Read more
  •  11
    Quo vadit Complexity
    Complexity 7 (1): 3-4. 2001.
  •  16
    Networks in molecular evolution
    with Peter F. Stadler
    Complexity 8 (1): 34-42. 2002.
  •  7
  •  60
    On constructing completions
    with Laura Crosilla and Hajime Ishihara
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 70 (3): 969-978. 2005.
    The Dedekind cuts in an ordered set form a set in the sense of constructive Zermelo—Fraenkel set theory. We deduce this statement from the principle of refinement, which we distill before from the axiom of fullness. Together with exponentiation, refinement is equivalent to fullness. None of the defining properties of an ordering is needed, and only refinement for two—element coverings is used. In particular, the Dedekind reals form a set; whence we have also refined an earlier result by Aczel an…Read more
  •  23
    A generalized cut characterization of the fullness axiom in CZF
    with Laura Crosilla and Erik Palmgren
    Logic Journal of the IGPL 21 (1): 63-76. 2013.
    In the present note, we study a generalization of Dedekind cuts in the context of constructive Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory CZF. For this purpose, we single out an equivalent of CZF's axiom of fullness and show that it is sufficient to derive that the Dedekind cuts in this generalized sense form a set. We also discuss the instance of this equivalent of fullness that is tantamount to the assertion that the class of Dedekind cuts in the rational numbers, in the customary constructive sense includin…Read more
  •  14
    Preface
    with Thierry Coquand, Maria Emilia Maietti, and Giovanni Sambin
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 167 (9): 725. 2016.
  •  14
    Preface
    with Andrej Bauer, Thierry Coquand, and Giovanni Sambin
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 163 (2): 85-86. 2012.
  •  144
    Binary Refinement Implies Discrete Exponentiation
    with Peter Aczel, Laura Crosilla, Hajime Ishihara, and Erik Palmgren
    Studia Logica 84 (3): 361-368. 2006.
    Working in the weakening of constructive Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory in which the subset collection scheme is omitted, we show that the binary refinement principle implies all the instances of the exponentiation axiom in which the basis is a discrete set. In particular binary refinement implies that the class of detachable subsets of a set form a set. Binary refinement was originally extracted from the fullness axiom, an equivalent of subset collection, as a principle that was sufficient to prov…Read more
  •  43
    Apartness, Topology, and Uniformity: a Constructive View
    with Douglas Bridges and Luminiţa Vîţă
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 48 (4): 16-28. 2002.
    The theory of apartness spaces, and their relation to topological spaces (in the point–set case) and uniform spaces (in the set–set case), is sketched. New notions of local decomposability and regularity are investigated, and the latter is used to produce an example of a classically metrisable apartness on R that cannot be induced constructively by a uniform structure.
  •  39
    In a fragment entitled Elementa Nova Matheseos Universalis Leibniz writes “the mathesis [...] shall deliver the method through which things that are conceivable can be exactly determined”; in another fragment he takes the mathesis to be “the science of all things that are conceivable.” Leibniz considers all mathematical disciplines as branches of the mathesis and conceives the mathesis as a general science of forms applicable not only to magnitudes but to every object that exists in our imaginat…Read more
  •  2
    Syntax for Semantics: Krull’s Maximal Ideal Theorem
    with Daniel Wessel
    In Gerhard Heinzmann & Gereon Wolters (eds.), Paul Lorenzen -- Mathematician and Logician, Springer Verlag. pp. 77-102. 2021.
    Krull’s Maximal Ideal Theorem is one of the most prominent incarnations of the Axiom of Choice in ring theory. For many a consequence of AC, constructive counterparts are well within reach, provided attention is turned to the syntactical underpinning of the problem at hand. This is one of the viewpoints of the revised Hilbert Programme in commutative algebra, which will here be carried out for MIT and several related classical principles.
  •  18
    The Jacobson Radical of a Propositional Theory
    with Giulio Fellin and Daniel Wessel
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 28 (2): 163-181. 2022.
    Alongside the analogy between maximal ideals and complete theories, the Jacobson radical carries over from ideals of commutative rings to theories of propositional calculi. This prompts a variant of Lindenbaum’s Lemma that relates classical validity and intuitionistic provability, and the syntactical counterpart of which is Glivenko’s Theorem. The Jacobson radical in fact turns out to coincide with the classical deductive closure. As a by-product we obtain a possible interpretation in logic of t…Read more
  •  11
    This book bridges the gaps between logic, mathematics and computer science by delving into the theory of well-quasi orders, also known as wqos. This highly active branch of combinatorics is deeply rooted in and between many fields of mathematics and logic, including proof theory, commutative algebra, braid groups, graph theory, analytic combinatorics, theory of relations, reverse mathematics and subrecursive hierarchies. As a unifying concept for slick finiteness or termination proofs, wqos have…Read more
  •  22
    Some forms of excluded middle for linear orders
    with Daniel Wessel
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 65 (1): 105-107. 2019.
    The intersection of a linearly ordered set of total subrelations of a total relation with range 2 need not be total, constructively.
  •  5
    Proof and Computation (edited book)
    with Klaus Mainzer and Helmut Schwichtenberg
    World Scientific. 1995.
    Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Proof and Computation, held in Marktoberdorf, Germany, July 20 - August 1, 1993.
  •  32
    In the present contribution we look at the legacy of Hilbert's programme in some recent developments in mathematics. Hilbert's ideas have seen new life in generalised and relativised forms by the hands of proof theorists and have been a source of motivation for the so--called reverse mathematics programme initiated by H. Friedman and S. Simpson. More recently Hilbert's programme has inspired T. Coquand and H. Lombardi to undertake a new approach to constructive algebra in which strong emphasis i…Read more
  •  23
    A Constructive Look at Generalised Cauchy Reals
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 46 (1): 125-134. 2000.
    We investigate how nonstandard reals can be established constructively as arbitrary infinite sequences of rationals, following the classical approach due to Schmieden and Laugwitz. In particular, a total standard part map into Richman's generalised Dedekind reals is constructed without countable choice
  •  16
    Eliminating disjunctions by disjunction elimination
    with Davide Rinaldi and Daniel Wessel
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 23 (2): 181-200. 2017.
    Completeness and other forms of Zorn’s Lemma are sometimes invoked for semantic proofs of conservation in relatively elementary mathematical contexts in which the corresponding syntactical conservation would suffice. We now show how a fairly general syntactical conservation theorem that covers plenty of the semantic approaches follows from an utmost versatile criterion for conservation given by Scott in 1974.To this end we work with multi-conclusion entailment relations as extending single-concl…Read more
  •  18
    Complexity has come of age
    with Alfred Hübler
    Complexity 21 (S2): 6-6. 2016.