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E-book: Residuated Lattices: An Algebraic Glimpse at Substructural Logics

(Chapman University, Orange, USA), (Australian National University, Canberra, Australia), (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Ishikaw), (School of Information Science, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)
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The book is meant to serve two purposes. The first and more obvious one is to present state of the art results in algebraic research into residuated structures related to substructural logics. The second, less obvious but equally important, is to provide a reasonably gentle introduction to algebraic logic. At the beginning, the second objective is predominant. Thus, in the first few chapters the reader will find a primer of universal algebra for logicians, a crash course in nonclassical logics for algebraists, an introduction to residuated structures, an outline of Gentzen-style calculi as well as some titbits of proof theory - the celebrated Hauptsatz, or cut elimination theorem, among them. These lead naturally to a discussion of interconnections between logic and algebra, where we try to demonstrate how they form two sides of the same coin. We envisage that the initial chapters could be used as a textbook for a graduate course, perhaps entitled Algebra and Substructural Logics.
As the book progresses the first objective gains predominance over the second. Although the precise point of equilibrium would be difficult to specify, it is safe to say that we enter the technical part with the discussion of various completions of residuated structures. These include Dedekind-McNeille completions and canonical extensions. Completions are used later in investigating several finiteness properties such as the finite model property, generation of varieties by their finite members, and finite embeddability. The algebraic analysis of cut elimination that follows, also takes recourse to completions. Decidability of logics, equational and quasi-equational theories comes next, where we show how proof theoretical methods like cut elimination are preferable for small logics/theories, but semantic tools like Rabin's theorem work better for big ones. Then we turn to Glivenko's theorem, which says that a formula is an intuitionistic tautology if and only if its double negation is a classical one. We generalise it to the substructural setting, identifying for each substructural logic its Glivenko equivalence class with smallest and largest element. This is also where we begin investigating lattices of logics and varieties, rather than particular examples. We continue in this vein by presenting a number of results concerning minimal varieties/maximal logics. A typical theorem there says that for some given well-known variety its subvariety lattice has precisely such-and-such number of minimal members (where values for such-and-such include, but are not limited to, continuum, countably many and two). In the last two chapters we focus on the lattice of varieties corresponding to logics without contraction. In one we prove a negative result: that there are no nontrivial splittings in that variety. In the other, we prove a positive one: that semisimple varieties coincide with discriminator ones.

Within the second, more technical part of the book another transition process may be traced. Namely, we begin with logically inclined technicalities and end with algebraically inclined ones. Here, perhaps, algebraic rendering of Glivenko theorems marks the equilibrium point, at least in the sense that finiteness properties, decidability and Glivenko theorems are of clear interest to logicians, whereas semisimplicity and discriminator varieties are universal algebra par exellence. It is for the reader to judge whether we succeeded in weaving these threads into a seamless fabric.

- Considers both the algebraic and logical perspective within a common framework.
- Written by experts in the area.
- Easily accessible to graduate students and researchers from other fields.
- Results summarized in tables and diagrams to provide an overview of the area.
- Useful as a textbook for a course in algebraic logic, with exercises and suggested research directions.
- Provides a concise introduction to the subject and leads directly to rese
Contents vii
List of Figures
xix
List of Tables
xxi
Introduction 1(12)
Getting started
13(62)
First-order languages and semantics
13(11)
Concepts from universal algebra
24(14)
Logic
38(13)
Logic and algebra
51(7)
Cut elimination in sequent calculi
58(4)
Consequence relations and matrices
62(13)
Exercises
69(3)
Notes
72(3)
Substructural logics and residuated lattices
75(66)
Sequent calculi and substructural logics
76(15)
Residuated lattices and FL-algebras
91(6)
Important subclasses of substructural logics
97(22)
Parametrized local deduction theorem
119(5)
Hilbert systems
124(6)
Algebraization and deductive filters
130(11)
Exercises
135(3)
Notes
138(3)
Residuation and structure theory
141(70)
Residuation theory and Galois connections
142(7)
Residuated structures
149(2)
Involutive residuated structures
151(5)
Further examples of residuated structures
156(26)
Subvariety lattices
182(5)
Structure theory
187(24)
Exercises
204(6)
Notes
210(1)
Decidability
211(34)
Syntactic proof of cut elimination
211(6)
Decidability as a consequence of cut elimination
217(9)
Further results
226(4)
Undecidability
230(15)
Exercises
240(1)
Notes
241(4)
Logical and algebraic properties
245(44)
Syntactic approach to logical properties
245(9)
Maksimova's variable separation property
254(3)
Algebraic characterizations
257(8)
Maksimova's property and well-connected pairs
265(6)
Deductive interpolation properties
271(8)
Craig interpolation property
279(10)
Exercises
287(1)
Notes
287(2)
Completions and finite embeddability
289(34)
Completions of posets
289(9)
Canonical extensions of residuated groupoids
298(5)
Nuclear completions of residuated groupoids
303(3)
Negative results for completions
306(4)
Finite embeddability property
310(13)
Exercises
319(2)
Notes
321(2)
Algebraic aspects of cut elimination
323(22)
Gentzen matrices for the sequent calculus FL
324(3)
Quasi-completions and cut elimination
327(5)
Cut elimination for other systems
332(7)
Finite model property
339(6)
Exercises
342(1)
Notes
342(3)
Glivenko theorems
345(32)
Overview
345(3)
Glivenko equivalence
348(4)
Glivenko properties
352(8)
More on the equational Glivenko property
360(4)
Special cases
364(8)
Generalized Kolmogorov translation
372(5)
Exercises
375(1)
Notes
375(2)
Lattices of logics and varieties
377(62)
General facts about atoms
378(2)
Minimal subvarieties of RL
380(11)
Minimal subvarieties of FL
391(10)
Almost minimal subvarieties of FLew
401(14)
Almost minimal varieties of BL-algebras
415(2)
Translations of subvariety lattices
417(5)
Axiomatizations for joins of varieties and meets of logics
422(9)
The subvariety lattices of LG and LG
431(8)
Exercises
436(1)
Notes
437(2)
Splittings
439(24)
Splittings in general
439(1)
Splittings in varieties of algebras
440(1)
Algebras describing themselves
441(5)
Construction that excludes splittings
446(13)
Only one splitting
459(4)
Exercises
459(1)
Notes
460(3)
Semisimplicity
463(16)
Semisimplicity, discriminator, EDPC
463(2)
Free FLew-algebras are semisimple: outline
465(1)
A characterization of semisimple FLew-algebras
465(1)
Sequent calculi for FLew
466(4)
Semisimplicity of free FLew-algebras
470(1)
Inside FLew semisimplicity implies discriminator: outline
471(1)
A characterization of semisimple subvarieties of FLew
472(2)
Semisimplicity forces discriminator
474(5)
Exercises
477(1)
Notes
478(1)
Bibliography 479(18)
Index 497