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  1. Imperative programs as proofs via game semantics.Martin Churchill, Jim Laird & Guy McCusker - 2013 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 164 (11):1038-1078.
    Game semantics extends the Curry–Howard isomorphism to a three-way correspondence: proofs, programs, strategies. But the universe of strategies goes beyond intuitionistic logics and lambda calculus, to capture stateful programs. In this paper we describe a logical counterpart to this extension, in which proofs denote such strategies. The system is expressive: it contains all of the connectives of Intuitionistic Linear Logic, and first-order quantification. Use of Lairdʼs sequoid operator allows proofs with imperative behaviour to be expressed. Thus, we can embed first-order (...)
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  • From axioms to synthetic inference rules via focusing.Sonia Marin, Dale Miller, Elaine Pimentel & Marco Volpe - 2022 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 173 (5):103091.
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  • Non decomposable connectives of linear logic.Roberto Maieli - 2019 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 170 (11):102709.
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  • A categorical semantics for polarized MALL.Masahiro Hamano & Philip Scott - 2007 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 145 (3):276-313.
    In this paper, we present a categorical model for Multiplicative Additive Polarized Linear Logic , which is the linear fragment of Olivier Laurent’s Polarized Linear Logic. Our model is based on an adjunction between reflective/coreflective full subcategories / of an ambient *-autonomous category . Similar structures were first introduced by M. Barr in the late 1970’s in abstract duality theory and more recently in work on game semantics for linear logic. The paper has two goals: to discuss concrete models and (...)
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  • Modularity of proof-nets.Roberto Maieli & Quintijn Puite - 2005 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 44 (2):167-193.
    When we cut a multiplicative proof-net of linear logic in two parts we get two modules with a certain border. We call pretype of a module the set of partitions over its border induced by Danos-Regnier switchings. The type of a module is then defined as the double orthogonal of its pretype. This is an optimal notion describing the behaviour of a module: two modules behave in the same way precisely if they have the same type.In this paper we define (...)
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  • Essay Review of D.M. Gabbay and F. Guenther (eds), H andbook of Philosophical Logic , 2nd edn, vol 9, Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer 2002. [REVIEW]Graham White - 2004 - History and Philosophy of Logic 25 (2):147--152.
    D. M. GABBAY and F. GUENTHER, Handbook of philosophical logic, 2nd edn, vol. 9. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer, 2002. xiv + 368 pp. €129.00, US$112.00, £79.00. ISBN1 402 00699 3. The philo...
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  • Non-commutative proof construction: a constraint-based approach.Jean-Marc Andreoli, Roberto Maieli & Paul Ruet - 2006 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 142 (1):212-244.
    This work presents a computational interpretation of the construction process for cyclic linear logic and non-commutative logic sequential proofs. We assume a proof construction paradigm, based on a normalisation procedure known as focussing, which efficiently manages the non-determinism of the construction. Similarly to the commutative case, a new formulation of focussing for NL is used to introduce a general constraint-based technique in order to dealwith partial information during proof construction. In particular, the procedure develops through construction steps propagating constraints in (...)
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  • On the unity of duality.Noam Zeilberger - 2008 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 153 (1-3):66-96.
    Most type systems are agnostic regarding the evaluation strategy for the underlying languages, with the value restriction for ML which is absent in Haskell as a notable exception. As type systems become more precise, however, detailed properties of the operational semantics may become visible because properties captured by the types may be sound under one strategy but not the other. For example, intersection types distinguish between call-by-name and call-by-value functions, because the subtyping law ∩≤A→ is unsound for the latter in (...)
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