Okay
so quiz is over.
We're talking about a world description language
aka a logic called ALC.
The idea there is that we try to kind of get as much functionality
expressive functionality
out of first-order logic without crossing the decidability line.
And the main mechanism here is that we basically have a funny variant of quantification
something
of the form for all r phi
where phi is a concept and r is a relation
which really
means
and correspondingly
and this actually means
so later in the tableau
x is a member
say there is r phi
that really means that x has an r successor that is in phi.
And the intuition here is that instead of the first-order formula for all xA
which
really says all of the x's in the whole universe
which may be extremely many
have the property
of making A true.
Here we're basically saying something about for all or exists
but only for the r successors.
And you can imagine that the set of r successors is kind of systematically smaller.
And that's the difference between these two logics.
We can say for all x's in the universe
of which there are more
and for all r successors
is kind of a restricted quantification
that's smaller.
And that's really the thing that makes this decidable.
And we've looked at
we started looking at
the satisfiability problem using a tableau
algorithm for two kinds of judgments.
One is x is in a concept phi
and x is r related to y.
Those are the things we put up in our calculus
and that gives us this very simple little
calculus.
We have a closure rule that if something is in a concept
an atomic concept
and it's
a complement
then you can close the and and the rules for intersection and union behave
exactly like and and or.
Presenters
Zugänglich über
Offener Zugang
Dauer
01:25:46 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2026-01-27
Hochgeladen am
2026-01-28 01:05:09
Sprache
en-US