•  37
    Unified Sequent Calculi and Natural Deduction Systems for Until-free Linear-time Temporal Logics
    with Norihiro Kamide
    Bulletin of the Section of Logic 54 (2): 227-282. 2025.
    A unified Gentzen-style proof-theoretic framework for until-free propositional linear-time temporal logic and its intuitionistic variant is introduced. The framework unifies Gentzen-style single-succedent sequent calculi and natural deduction systems for both the classical and intuitionistic versions of these temporal logics. Theorems establishing the equivalence between the proposed sequent calculi and natural deduction systems are proved. Furthermore, the cut-elimination theorems for the propo…Read more
  •  53
    Unified Natural Deduction for Logics of Strong Negation
    with Norihiro Kamide
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 66 (4): 543-580. 2025.
    This study introduces Gentzen-style natural deduction systems for Gurevich logic, Nelson logic, intuitionistic logic, classical logic, and modal logic. Gurevich logic is an extended constructive three-valued logic obtained from intuitionistic logic by adding strong negation, and Nelson logic is the intuitionistic-negation-less fragment of Gurevich logic. The proposed natural deduction systems are constructed in a modular manner based on primitive rules for negation, that is, rules of explosion, …Read more
  •  49
    Proof Theory for Extended Belnap–Dunn and Intuitionistic Logics
    with Norihiro Kamide
    Studia Logica 1-27. forthcoming.
    First, G0-style sequent calculi for extended Belnap–Dunn and intuitionistic logics, including Nelson and Gurevich logics, are introduced. A theorem establishing the equivalence between G0- and G3-style sequent calculi for these logics is then presented, and the cut-elimination theorem for these G0-style calculi is obtained as a result. Next, natural deduction systems with general elimination rules are introduced for these logics, and a full normalization theorem for these natural deduction syste…Read more
  •  41
    Modular Sequent Calculi for Interpretability Logics
    with Cosimo Perini Brogi and Nicola Olivetti
    Review of Symbolic Logic 18 (3): 704-743. 2025.
    An original family of labelled sequent calculi $\mathsf {G3IL}^{\star }$ for classical interpretability logics is presented, modularly designed on the basis of Verbrugge semantics (a.k.a. generalised Veltman semantics) for those logics. We prove that each of our calculi enjoys excellent structural properties, namely, admissibility of weakening, contraction and, more relevantly, cut. A complexity measure of the cut is defined by extending the notion of range previously introduced by Negri w.r.t. …Read more
  •  81
    A Proof-Theoretic Approach to Formal Epistemology
    In Yale Weiss & Romina Birman (eds.), Saul Kripke on Modal Logic, Springer Verlag. pp. 303-345. 2024.
    Ever since antiquity, attempts have been made at defining knowledge through belief augmented by additional properties such as truth and justification. These characterizations have been challenged by Gettier counterexamples and their variants. A modern proposal, what is known as defeasibility theory, characterizes knowledge through stability under revision of beliefs on the basis of true or arbitrary information. A formal investigation of such a proposal calls for the methods of dynamic epistemic…Read more
  •  59
    G3-style Sequent Calculi for Gurevich Logic and Its Neighbors
    with Norihiro Kamide
    Studia Logica 113 (6): 1783-1811. 2025.
    G3-style sequent calculi are introduced for a family of logics with strong negation: Gurevich logic, Nelson logic, intuitionistic propositional logic, Avron logic, De-Omori logic, and classical propositional logic. Structural properties including cut elimination are established for these calculi. In addition, a Glivenko theorem for embedding classical propositional logic into Gurevich logic is shown.
  •  286
    Anti-realist epistemic conceptions of truth imply what is called the knowability principle: All truths are possibly known. The principle can be formalized in a bimodal propositional logic, with an alethic modality ${\diamondsuit}$ and an epistemic modality ${\mathcal{K}}$, by the axiom scheme ${A \supset \diamondsuit \mathcal{K} A}$. The use of classical logic and minimal assumptions about the two modalities lead to the paradoxical conclusion that all truths are known, ${A \supset \mathcal{K} A}…Read more
  •  128
    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
  •  68
    A Terminating Intuitionistic Calculus
    with Giulio Fellin
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 90 (1): 278-297. 2025.
    A terminating sequent calculus for intuitionistic propositional logic is obtained by modifying the R $\supset $ rule of the labelled sequent calculus $\mathbf {G3I}$. This is done by adding a variant of the principle of a fortiori in the left-hand side of the premiss of the rule. In the resulting calculus, called ${\mathbf {G3I}}_{\mathbf {t}}$, derivability of any given sequent is directly decidable by root-first proof search, without any extra device such as loop-checking. In the negative case…Read more
  •  170
    Proof analysis for Lewis counterfactuals
    Review of Symbolic Logic 9 (1): 44-75. 2016.
  •  127
    Proof-theoretical analysis of order relations
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 43 (3): 297-309. 2004.
    A proof-theoretical analysis of elementary theories of order relations is effected through the formulation of order axioms as mathematical rules added to contraction-free sequent calculus. Among the results obtained are proof-theoretical formulations of conservativity theorems corresponding to Szpilrajn’s theorem on the extension of a partial order into a linear one. Decidability of the theories of partial and linear order for quantifier-free sequents is shown by giving terminating methods of pr…Read more
  •  67
    Alternative Axiomatization for Logics of Agency in a G3 Calculus
    Foundations of Science 28 (1): 205-224. 2021.
    In a recent paper, Negri and Pavlović (Studia Logica 1–35, 2020) have formulated a decidable sequent calculus for the logic of agency, specifically for a deliberative see-to-it-that modality, or dstit. In that paper the adequacy of the system is demonstrated by showing the derivability of the axiomatization of dstit from Belnap et al. (Facing the future: agents and choices in our indeterminist world. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001). And while the influence of the latter book on the study …Read more
  •  260
    Reasoning About Collectively Accepted Group Beliefs
    with Raul Hakli
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 40 (4): 531-555. 2011.
    A proof-theoretical treatment of collectively accepted group beliefs is presented through a multi-agent sequent system for an axiomatization of the logic of acceptance. The system is based on a labelled sequent calculus for propositional multi-agent epistemic logic with labels that correspond to possible worlds and a notation for internalized accessibility relations between worlds. The system is contraction- and cut-free. Extensions of the basic system are considered, in particular with rules th…Read more
  •  399
    Does the deduction theorem fail for modal logic?
    with Raul Hakli
    Synthese 187 (3): 849-867. 2012.
    Various sources in the literature claim that the deduction theorem does not hold for normal modal or epistemic logic, whereas others present versions of the deduction theorem for several normal modal systems. It is shown here that the apparent problem arises from an objectionable notion of derivability from assumptions in an axiomatic system. When a traditional Hilbert-type system of axiomatic logic is generalized into a system for derivations from assumptions, the necessitation rule has to be m…Read more
  •  49
    Admissibility of structural rules for extensions of contraction-free sequent calculi
    with R. Dyckhoff
    Logic Journal of the IGPL 9 (4): 541-548. 2001.
    The contraction-free sequent calculus G4 for intuitionistic logic is extended by rules following a general rule-scheme for nonlogical axioms. Admissibility of structural rules for these extensions is proved in a direct way by induction on derivations. This method permits the representation of various applied logics as complete, contraction- and cut-free sequent calculus systems with some restrictions on the nature of the derivations. As specific examples, intuitionistic theories of apartness and…Read more
  •  78
    The Gödel-McKinsey-Tarski embedding for infinitary intuitionistic logic and its extensions
    with Matteo Tesi
    Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 174 (8): 103285. 2023.
  •  85
    Glivenko sequent classes and constructive cut elimination in geometric logics
    with Giulio Fellin and Eugenio Orlandelli
    Archive for Mathematical Logic 62 (5): 657-688. 2023.
    A constructivisation of the cut-elimination proof for sequent calculi for classical, intuitionistic and minimal infinitary logics with geometric rules—given in earlier work by the second author—is presented. This is achieved through a procedure where the non-constructive transfinite induction on the commutative sum of ordinals is replaced by two instances of Brouwer’s Bar Induction. The proof of admissibility of the structural rules is made ordinal-free by introducing a new well-founded relation…Read more
  •  57
    Geometric Rules in Infinitary Logic
    In Ofer Arieli & Anna Zamansky (eds.), Arnon Avron on Semantics and Proof Theory of Non-Classical Logics, Springer Verlag. pp. 265-293. 2021.
    Large portions of mathematics such as algebra and geometry can be formalized using first-order axiomatizations. In many cases it is even possible to use a very well-behaved class of first-order axioms, namely, what are called coherent or geometric implications. Such class of axioms can be translated to inference rules that can be added to a sequent calculus while preserving its structural properties. In this work, this fundamental result is extended to their infinitary generalizations as extensi…Read more
  • Tableaux 2021, Lnai 12842 (edited book)
    with Anupam Das
    . 2021.
  •  61
    A sequent calculus methodology for systems of agency based on branching-time frames with agents and choices is proposed, starting with a complete and cut-free system for multi-agent deliberative STIT; the methodology allows a transparent justification of the rules, good structural properties, analyticity, direct completeness and decidability proofs.
  •  111
    Proof theory for quantified monotone modal logics
    Logic Journal of the IGPL 27 (4): 478-506. 2019.
    This paper provides a proof-theoretic study of quantified non-normal modal logics. It introduces labelled sequent calculi based on neighbourhood semantics for the first-order extension, with both varying and constant domains, of monotone NNML, and studies the role of the Barcan formulas in these calculi. It will be shown that the calculi introduced have good structural properties: invertibility of the rules, height-preserving admissibility of weakening and contraction and syntactic cut eliminati…Read more
  •  98
    Conditional beliefs: From neighbourhood semantics to sequent calculus
    with Marianna Girlando, Nicola Olivetti, and Vincent Risch
    Review of Symbolic Logic 11 (4): 736-779. 2018.
    The logic of Conditional Beliefs has been introduced by Board, Baltag, and Smets to reason about knowledge and revisable beliefs in a multi-agent setting. In this article both the semantics and the proof theory for this logic are studied. First, a natural semantics forCDLis defined in terms of neighbourhood models, a multi-agent generalisation of Lewis’ spheres models, and it is shown that the axiomatization ofCDLis sound and complete with respect to this semantics. Second, it is shown that the …Read more
  •  71
    The Logic of Conditional Beliefs: Neighbourhood Semantics and Sequent Calculus
    with Marianna Girlando, Nicola Olivetti, and Vincent Risch
    In Lev Beklemishev, Stéphane Demri & András Máté (eds.), Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 11, Csli Publications. pp. 322-341. 2016.
  •  61
    The intensional side of algebraic-topological representation theorems
    Synthese 198 (Suppl 5): 1121-1143. 2017.
    Stone representation theorems are a central ingredient in the metatheory of philosophical logics and are used to establish modal embedding results in a general but indirect and non-constructive way. Their use in logical embeddings will be reviewed and it will be shown how they can be circumvented in favour of direct and constructive arguments through the methods of analytic proof theory, and how the intensional part of the representation results can be recovered from the syntactic proof of those…Read more