Suszko's Problem: Mixed Consequence and Compositionality
Emmanuel Chemla, Paul Egr\'e

TL;DR
This paper explores Suszko's problem of minimal truth values for consequence relations, providing representation theorems, rank results, and modifications to preserve truth-functionality in semantics.
Contribution
It offers a systematic perspective on mixed consequence, linking structural properties to semantic interpretation, and refines reduction methods to maintain compositionality and truth-functionality.
Findings
Proves general representation theorems relating structural properties to semantics.
Derives maximum-rank and exact-rank results for various logics.
Proposes a modified reduction method preserving truth-functionality.
Abstract
Suszko's problem is the problem of finding the minimal number of truth values needed to semantically characterize a syntactic consequence relation. Suszko proved that every Tarskian consequence relation can be characterized using only two truth values. Malinowski showed that this number can equal three if some of Tarski's structural constraints are relaxed. By so doing, Malinowski introduced a case of so-called mixed consequence, allowing the notion of a designated value to vary between the premises and the conclusions of an argument. In this paper we give a more systematic perspective on Suszko's problem and on mixed consequence. First, we prove general representation theorems relating structural properties of a consequence relation to their semantic interpretation, uncovering the semantic counterpart of substitution-invariance, and establishing that (intersective) mixed consequence is…
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