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by iamcurious
840 days ago
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On the surface: The world would be premises and stories would be proofs. Linear Logic for Non-Linear Storytelling by Anne-Gwenn Bosser and Marc Cavazza and Ronan Champagnat has an example. Then generating proofs means generating valid stories. Linear logic is tough though, it is a logic that admits contradiction so straightaway most logicians are clueless in how to handle it. |
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It is interesting in itself, I admit that. But I don't see how it would admit contradiction, or how logicians are clueless how to handle it. It is in fact well understood, and used in many places, e.g. computer science [1,2]
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_logic
[2] https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logic-linear/