Retracing some paths in categorical semantics: From process-propositions-as-types to categorified reals and computers
Dusko Pavlovic

TL;DR
This paper explores the categorical semantics of process logic, extending traditional propositional logic to dynamic processes, and introduces a framework including a category of all real numbers as processes with computable and uncomputable elements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive logical overview of interaction categories, distinguishing models of computation from general processes, and introduces a novel category of real numbers as processes.
Findings
Introduction of a category of all real numbers as processes
Use of polarized bisimulations as morphisms
Sketch of a structure for the computable fragment of categorical semantics
Abstract
The logical parallelism of propositional connectives and type constructors extends beyond the static realm of predicates, to the dynamic realm of processes. Understanding the logical parallelism of process propositions and dynamic types was one of the central problems of the semantics of computation, albeit not always clear or explicit. It sprung into clarity through the early work of Samson Abramsky, where the central ideas of denotational semantics and process calculus were brought together and analyzed by categorical tools, e.g. in the structure of interaction categories. While some logical structures borne of dynamics of computation immediately started to emerge, others had to wait, be it because the underlying logical principles (mainly those arising from coinduction) were not yet sufficiently well-understood, or simply because the research community was more interested in other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Semantic Web and Ontologies · Cognitive Computing and Networks
