Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10329233 | Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science | 2005 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
We present a meta-logic that contains a new quantifier â (for encoding “generic judgments”) and inference rules for reasoning within fixed points of a given specification. We then specify the operational semantics and bisimulation relations for the finite Ï-calculus within this meta-logic. Since we restrict to the finite case, the ability of the meta-logic to reason within fixed points becomes a powerful and complete tool since simple proof search can compute this one fixed point. The â quantifier helps with the delicate issues surrounding the scope of variables within Ï-calculus expressions and their executions (proofs). We shall illustrate several merits of the logical specifications we write: they are natural and declarative; they contain no side conditions concerning names of variables while maintaining a completely formal treatment of such variables; differences between late and open bisimulation relations are easy to see declaratively; and proof search involving the application of inference rules, unification, and backtracking can provide complete proof systems for both one-step transitions and for bisimulation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computational Theory and Mathematics
Authors
Alwen Tiu, Dale Miller,