Formal Theories of Occurrences and Substitutions

Gazzari provides a mathematical theory of occurrences and of substitutions, which are a generalisation of occurrences constituting substitution functions. The dissertation focusses on term occurrences in terms of a first order language, but the methods and results obtained there can easily be carrie...

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Veröffentlicht in:The bulletin of symbolic logic 2022-06, Vol.28 (2), p.261-263
1. Verfasser: Gazzari, René
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gazzari provides a mathematical theory of occurrences and of substitutions, which are a generalisation of occurrences constituting substitution functions. The dissertation focusses on term occurrences in terms of a first order language, but the methods and results obtained there can easily be carried over to arbitrary kinds of occurrences in arbitrary kinds of languages. The aim of the dissertation is twofold: first, Gazzari intends to provide an adequate formal representation of philosophically relevant concepts (not only of occurrences and substitutions, but also of substitution functions, of calculations as well as of intuitively given properties of the discussed entities) and to improve this way our understanding of these concepts; second, he intends to provide a formal exploration of the introduced concepts including the detailed development of the methods needed for their adequate treatment. The dissertation serves as a methodological fundament for consecutive research on topics demanding a precise treatment of occurrences and as a foundation for all scientific work dealing with occurrences only informally; the formal investigations are complemented by a brief survey of the development of the notion of occurrences in mathematics, philosophy and computer science. The notion of occurrences. Occurrences are determined by three aspects: an occurrence is always an occurrence of a syntactic entity (its shape) in a syntactic entity (its context) at a specific position. Context and shape can be any meaningful combination of well-known syntactic entities as, in logic, terms, formulae or formula trees. Gazzari’s crucial idea is to represent the position of occurrences by nominal forms, essentially as introduced by Schütte [2]. The nominal forms are a generalisation of standard syntactic entities in which so called nominal symbols $*_k$ may occur. The position of an occurrence is obtained by eliminating the intended shape in the context, which means to replace the intended shape by suitable nominal symbols. Standard occurrences. Central tool of the theory of nominal terms (nominal forms generalising standard terms) is the general substitution function mapping a nominal term $\mathtt {t}$ and a sequence $\vec {\mathtt {t}}$ of them to the result $\mathtt {t}[\vec {\mathtt {t}}]$ of replacing simultaneously the nominal symbols $*_k$ in the first argument by the respective entries $\mathtt {t}_k$ of the second argument. A triple $\mathfrak {o}=\langle {t,s,\mathtt
ISSN:1079-8986
1943-5894
DOI:10.1017/bsl.2021.53