Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4661986 | Annals of Pure and Applied Logic | 2012 | 13 Pages |
We study classes of propositional contradictions based on the Least Number Principle (LNP) in the refutation system of Resolution and its generalisations with bounded conjunction, Res(k). We prove that any first-order sentence with no finite models that admits a Σ1 interpretation of the LNP, relativised to a set that is quantifier-free definable, generates a sequence of propositional contradictions that have polynomially-sized refutations in the system Res(k), for some k. When one considers the LNP with total order we demonstrate that a Π1 interpretation of this is sufficient to generate such a propositional sequence with polynomially-sized refutations in the system Res(k). On the other hand, we prove that a very simple first-order sentence that admits a Π1 interpretation of the LNP (with partial and not total order) requires exponentially-sized refutations in both Resolution and Res(k), for all constant k.