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Suszko's Thesis and Many-valued Logical Structures

Sayantan Roy, Sankha S. Basu, Mihir K. Chakraborty

Abstract

In this article, we try to formulate a definition of ''many-valued logical structure''. For this, we embark on a deeper study of Suszko's Thesis ($\mathbf{ST}$) and show that the truth or falsity of $\mathbf{ST}$ depends, at least, on the precise notion of semantics. We propose two different notions of semantics and three different notions of entailment. The first one helps us formulate a precise definition of inferentially many-valued logical structures. The second and the third help us to generalise Suszko Reduction and provide adequate bivalent semantics for monotonic and a couple of nonmonotonic logical structures. All these lead us to a closer examination of the played by language/metalanguage hierarchy vis-á-vis $\mathbf{ST}$. We conclude that many-valued logical structures can be obtained if the bivalence of all the higher-order metalogics of the logic under consideration is discarded, building formal bridges between the theory of graded consequence and the theory of many-valued logical structures, culminating in generalisations of Suszko's Thesis.

Suszko's Thesis and Many-valued Logical Structures

Abstract

In this article, we try to formulate a definition of ''many-valued logical structure''. For this, we embark on a deeper study of Suszko's Thesis () and show that the truth or falsity of depends, at least, on the precise notion of semantics. We propose two different notions of semantics and three different notions of entailment. The first one helps us formulate a precise definition of inferentially many-valued logical structures. The second and the third help us to generalise Suszko Reduction and provide adequate bivalent semantics for monotonic and a couple of nonmonotonic logical structures. All these lead us to a closer examination of the played by language/metalanguage hierarchy vis-á-vis . We conclude that many-valued logical structures can be obtained if the bivalence of all the higher-order metalogics of the logic under consideration is discarded, building formal bridges between the theory of graded consequence and the theory of many-valued logical structures, culminating in generalisations of Suszko's Thesis.
Paper Structure (12 sections, 41 theorems, 43 equations)

This paper contains 12 sections, 41 theorems, 43 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 2.6

Let $(\mathscr{L},W)$ be a logical structure. Consider the following semantics for $\mathscr{L}$, $\mathfrak{S}=(\mathcal{P}(\mathscr{L}),\models_1,\models_2,S,\mathcal{P}(\mathscr{L}))$ where $S=\{(\models_1,\models_2)\}$, and for all $\Gamma\cup\Sigma\subseteq \mathscr{L}$$\models_1$ and $\models_ and Then, $W=W_{\mathfrak{S}}$.

Theorems & Definitions (121)

  • Definition 2.1: Semantics
  • Remark 2.2
  • Example 2.3
  • Example 2.4
  • Remark 2.5
  • Theorem 2.6: Canonical Semantics of a Logical Structure
  • proof
  • Remark 2.7
  • Definition 2.8: Algebraically $\kappa$-valued Semantics
  • Definition 2.9: Algebraically $\kappa$-valued Logic
  • ...and 111 more