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This book is dedicated to V.A. Yankov's seminal contributions to
the theory of propositional logics. His papers, published in the
1960s, are highly cited even today. The Yankov characteristic
formulas have become a very useful tool in propositional, modal and
algebraic logic. The papers contributed to this book provide the
new results on different generalizations and applications of
characteristic formulas in propositional, modal and algebraic
logics. In particular, an exposition of Yankov's results and their
applications in algebraic logic, the theory of admissible rules and
refutation systems is included in the book. In addition, the reader
can find the studies on splitting and join-splitting in
intermediate propositional logics that are based on Yankov-type
formulas which are closely related to canonical formulas, and the
study of properties of predicate extensions of non-classical
propositional logics. The book also contains an exposition of
Yankov's revolutionary approach to constructive proof theory. The
editors also include Yankov's contributions to history and
philosophy of mathematics and foundations of mathematics, as well
as an examination of his original interpretation of history of
Greek philosophy and mathematics.
The publication of Rasiowa and Sikorski's The Mathematics of
Metamathematics (1970), Rasiowa's An Algebraic Approach to
Non-Classical Logics (1974), and Wojcicki's Theory of Logical
Calculi (1988) created a niche in the field of mathematical and
philosophical logic. This in-depth study of the concept of a
consequence relation, culminating in the concept of a
Lindenbaum-Tarski algebra, fills this niche. Citkin and Muravitsky
consider the problem of obtaining confirmation that a statement is
a consequence of a set of statements as prerequisites, on the one
hand, and the problem of demonstrating that such confirmation does
not exist in the structure under consideration, on the other hand.
For the second part of this problem, the concept of the
Lindenbaum-Tarski algebra plays a key role, which becomes even more
important when the considered consequence relation is placed in the
context of decidability. This role is traced in the book for
various formal objective languages. The work also includes helpful
exercises to aid the reader's assimilation of the book's material.
Intended for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in
mathematics and philosophy, this book can be used to teach special
courses in logic with an emphasis on algebraic methods, for
self-study, and also as a reference work.
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