Bilateral base-extension semantics
Victor Barroso-Nascimento, Maria Os\'orio

TL;DR
This paper extends base-extension semantics to bilateral logic by incorporating both proof and refutation rules at the atomic level, establishing soundness, completeness, and semantic harmony in a dual intuitionistic framework.
Contribution
It introduces a bilateral version of base-extension semantics that includes atomic refutation rules, providing a new semantic foundation for bilateral proof-theoretic logic.
Findings
Semantic soundness and completeness with respect to 2Int logic
Definition of duality notions for rules, deductions, and bases
Bilateral semantic harmony as a restatement of the horizontal inversion principle
Abstract
Bilateralism is the position according to which assertion and rejection are conceptually independent speech acts. Logical bilateralism demands that systems of logic provide conditions for assertion and rejection that are not reducible to each other, which often leads to independent definitions of proof rules (for assertion) and dual proof rules, also called refutation rules (for rejection). Since it provides a critical account of what it means for something to be a proof or a refutation, bilateralism is often studied in the context of proof-theoretic semantics, an approach that aims to elucidate both the meaning of proofs (and refutations) and what kinds of semantics can be given if proofs (and refutations) are considered as basic semantic notions. The recent literature on bilateral proof-theoretic semantics has only dealt with the semantics of proofs and refutations, whereas we deal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Algebra and Logic · Logic, Reasoning, and Knowledge · Semantic Web and Ontologies
