Proof calculus
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In mathematical logic, a proof calculus corresponds to a family of formal systems that use a common style of formal inference for its inference rules. The specific inference rules of a member of such a family characterize the theory of a logic.
Usually a given proof calculus encompasses more than a single particular formal system, since many proof calculi can be used for radically different logics. For example, a paradigmatic case is the sequent calculus, which can be used to express the consequence relations of both intuitionistic logic and relevance logic. Thus, loosely speaking, a proof calculus is a template or design pattern, characterized by a certain style of formal inference, that may be specialized to produce specific formal systems, namely by specifying the actual inference rules for such a system. There is no consensus among logicians on how best to define the term.
[edit] Examples of proof calculi
The most widely known proof calculi are those classical calculi that are still in widespread use:
- The Hilbert calculus, of which the most famous example is the 1928 Hilbert-Ackermann system of first-order logic;
- Gerhard Gentzen's calculus of natural deduction, which is the first formalism of structural proof theory, and which is the cornerstone of the formulae-as-types correspondence relating logic to functional programming;
- Gentzen's sequent calculus, which is the most studied formalism of structural proof theory.
Many other proof calculi were, or might have been, seminal, but are not widely used today.
- Aristotle's system of syllogistic presented in the Organon readily admits formalisation. There is still some modern interest in syllogistic, carried out under the aegis of term logic.
- Gottlob Frege's two-dimensional notation of the Begriffsschrift is usually regarded as introducing the modern concept of quantifier to logic.
- C.S. Pierce's existential graph might easily have been seminal, had history worked out differently.
Modern research in logic teems with rival proof calculi:
- Several systems have been proposed which replace the usual textual syntax with some graphical syntax.
- Recently, many logicians interested in structural proof theory have proposed calculi with deep inference, for instance display logic, hypersequents, the calculus of structures, and bunched implication.