逻辑、计算和博弈 (18).pdf
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1、|5 TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Introduction 1 A whirlwind history,and changes in perspective Core Concepts 2 Basic language and semantics 3 Expressive power and invariance 4 Validity and decidability 5 Axioms,proofs,and completeness 6 Computation and complexity Basic Theory 7 Classical translation and
2、 expressive power 8 Increasing deductive power:the landscape of modal logics 9 What axioms say:frame correspondence 10 Descriptive power:extended modal languages 11 The next level:modal predicate logic Selected applications 12 Epistemic logic 13 Doxastic and conditional logic 14 Dynamic logic of act
3、ion 15 Dynamic logic of information 16 Preference and deontic logic 17 Modal logic and games 18 The structure and flow of time 19 Modal patterns in space 20 Intuitionistic logic 21 Provability logic Recent theoretical themes 22 Fixed-points,computation,and equilibrium 23 Issues in information dynami
4、cs 24 System combination and undecidability 219 CHAPTER 19 MODAL PATTERNS IN SPACE 19.1 Spatial structures When thinking about the physical world,logicians have taken Time as their main interest,because it fits so well with flow of information and computation.Spatial logics have been more marginal e
5、ven though historically,the axiomatic method was largely geometrical.An exception is Tarskis work on new geometrical primitives for space,and his famous decidable first-order axiomatization of elementary geometry.Today Space remains intriguing in many disciplines,and you can get a good impression of
6、 the whole field of spatial reasoning by looking at the Handbook of Spatial Logics,Springer,Dordrecht,2007.In this chapter,we just look at a few patterns from a modal perspective.Even then,Space can be studied at many levels,depending on ones interest,that come with their own mathematical transforma
7、tions.You must first choose some level of structure(topological,affine,metric)providing its invariances(homeomorphism,affine transformations,etc.).At each of these,a logician will then try to design some language that brings out interesting laws,preferably in a calculus of some reasonable complexity
8、.19.2 Modal logic and topology Let M be a topological space(X,O,V)with points X,a family of open sets O,and a valuation V as in modal models.Now we can interpret the modal language as follows:Definition Topological semantics.?is true at point s in M,written M,s|=?,if s is in the topological interior
9、 of M:the set of points satisfying in M.Formally,OO:sO&tO:M,t|=.177 Dually,the existential modality?will then denote a topological closure operator.Typical examples of topologies are metric spaces like the real line,or the real plane,etcetera.Please try to think of this semantics then as concretely
10、as you can in visual terms:177 This recalls the neighbourhood models of Chapter 10:we elaborate on this connection below.220 Example Defining parts of spoons.Let the proposition letter p denote the following spoon in IR2.We explain the topological regions defined by various other modal formulas(note
11、 that these need not be open):p?p?p?p?p p?p?p?p)?p You see how modal formulas of various operator depths define the interior,the boundary,the handle,and even the special point connecting the handle to the main oval part.This interpretation is attractive because the following Fact The modal axioms of
12、 S4 express the following topological properties:?expresses inclusion,?expresses idempotence,?()?expresses closure of open sets under intersections.There is no modal analogue of closure of open sets under arbitrary unions,given the finite nature of the language,but we do have this derivable principl
13、e in the logic S4:?(?)More generally,one can prove the following general completeness result:Theorem A modal formula is topologically valid iff it is provable in S4.The proof is a bit disappointing.Soundness is seen by direct inspection,as we just did.For completeness,one just finds an S4-style poss
14、ible worlds model for a consistent formula,where the order is reflexive and transitive.Now,any such model generates a topology:Fact Each pre-order induces a topology,where topological modal evaluation amounts to standard modal evaluation on relational models.221 Proof sketch The open sets in the top
15、ology are all subsets of the model that are closed under taking successors.In particular,an open basis is given by all upward cones of the form s=(tW|st.It is easy to see that,with this transformation,truth throughout some open neighbourhood of a world is equivalent to truth in all its relational su
16、ccessors.Structures of this special sort are called Alexandroff topologies:they have the special feature that arbitrary intersections of open sets are open,not just finite ones.Our modal models are such topologies and vice versa,and this analogy can be made quite precise.For instance,in an infinitar
17、y modal language,we have a matching unrestricted distribution law?iI i iI?i But the most central spaces in topology come from the earlier metric spaces,so the interest of our current setting is precisely how modal logic behaves on that unfamiliar territory.Example Unlimited distribution fails on met
18、ric spaces.Interpret the proposition letter pi as the open interval(1/i,+1/i),for all iN.Then the formulas?pi denote the same interval,and hence their intersections are the intersection of all these intervals,i.e.,0.But the expression?iI pi denotes the topological interior of the singleton set 0,whi
19、ch is the empty set.There are indeed two major families of topologies:metric spaces,and tree-like ones.The following point is overlooked by people who think life started in the 1950s.Historically,the first semantic interpretation for modal languages was in terms of the former,by Tarski in the 1930s,
20、and the standard relational semantics in the 1950s then switched to tree-like models.Only nowadays,broader topological models are picking up interest again.19.3 Special topics:invariance,expressive and deductive power All the earlier topics from general modal logic return with new twists here.Compar
21、ison games One can analyze the expressive power of our modal language with games between Spoiler and Duplicator,comparing points in two topological models:222 Definition Topo-games.Rounds proceed as follows,starting from some current match s t.Spoiler takes one of these points,and chooses an open ne
22、ighbourhood U in its model.Duplicator responds with an open neighbourhood V of the other current point.Still in the same round,Spoiler chooses a point vV,and then Duplicator chooses a point uU,making u v the new match.Duplicator loses if the two points differ qua atomic properties.This looks abstrac
23、t,but it is concrete.Here are some illustrations.Example Comparing points on spoons.In the above spoons,compare the following sets of intuitively different points:(a)(b)(c)For a start,here is a useful auxiliary result.It does not matter if players choose small or large open neighbourhoods in the gam
24、e.You can see this by trying a few moves,but there is also a general result,which is like the earlier fact that on relational models,evaluation of formulas only needs to look at Rclosed generated submodels around the current point:Fact(Locality Lemma)For any model M,s and modal formula,and any open
25、neighbourhood O of s,the following are equivalent:(a)M,s|=,and (b)M|O,s|=,where M|O is the model M restricted to the subset O.This Fact is easy to prove by induction on modal formulas.Now we consider games for the above three situations,where the black lines indicate the initial match between points
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