Search results for 'M. E. Coniglio' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. C. Caleiro, W. A. Carnielli, M. E. Coniglio, A. Sernadas & C. Sernadas (2003). Fibring Non-Truth-Functional Logics: Completeness Preservation. Journal of Logic, Language and Information 12 (2):183-211.score: 290.0
    Fibring has been shown to be useful for combining logics endowed withtruth-functional semantics. However, the techniques used so far are unableto cope with fibring of logics endowed with non-truth-functional semanticsas, for example, paraconsistent logics. The first main contribution of thepaper is the development of a suitable abstract notion of logic, that mayalso encompass systems with non-truth-functional connectives, and wherefibring can still be dealt with. Furthermore, it is shown that thisextended notion of fibring preserves completeness under certain reasonableconditions. This completeness transfer (...)
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  2. M. E. Coniglio & W. A. Carnielli (2002). Transfers Between Logics and Their Applications. Studia Logica 72 (3):367-400.score: 290.0
    In this paper, logics are conceived as two-sorted first-order structures, and we argue that this broad definition encompasses a wide class of logics with theoretical interest as well as interest from the point of view of applications. The language, concepts and methods of model theory can thus be used to describe the relationship between logics through morphisms of structures called transfers. This leads to a formal framework for studying several properties of abstract logics and their attributes such as consequence operator, (...)
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  3. Walter A. Carnielli, Marcelo E. Coniglio & Itala M. L. D.’Ottaviano (2009). New Dimensions on Translations Between Logics. Logica Universalis 3 (1):1-18.score: 270.0
    After a brief promenade on the several notions of translations that appear in the literature, we concentrate on three paradigms of translations between logics: ( conservative ) translations , transfers and contextual translations . Though independent, such approaches are here compared and assessed against questions about the meaning of a translation and about comparative strength and extensibility of a logic with respect to another.
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  4. Marcelo E. Coniglio & Newton M. Peron (2013). Modal Extensions of Sub-Classical Logics for Recovering Classical Logic. Logica Universalis 7 (1):71-86.score: 270.0
    In this paper we introduce non-normal modal extensions of the sub-classical logics CLoN, CluN and CLaN, in the same way that S0.5 0 extends classical logic. The first modal system is both paraconsistent and paracomplete, while the second one is paraconsistent and the third is paracomplete. Despite being non-normal, these systems are sound and complete for a suitable Kripke semantics. We also show that these systems are appropriate for interpreting □ as “is provable in classical logic”. This allows us to (...)
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  5. A. Carnielli Walter, E. Coniglio Marcelo & M. L. D.’Ottaviano Itala (2009). New Dimensions on Translations Between Logics. Logica Universalis 3 (1).score: 29.0
    After a brief promenade on the several notions of translations that appear in the literature, we concentrate on three paradigms of translations between logics: ( conservative ) translations , transfers and contextual translations . Though independent, such approaches are here compared and assessed against questions about the meaning of a translation and about comparative strength and extensibility of a logic with respect to another.
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