Handbook of philosophical logic ; Vol.13 ; 2nd ed.
in this book achapter on non-monotoniclogic a chapter on combinatory logic and calculus We feltat the time(1979)that non-monotonic logic was not ready fora chapter yet and that combinatory logic and calculus was toofar re-moved.1Non-monotonic logic is now a very major area of philosophi-cal logic, alongside default logics, labelled deductive systems,fibring log-ics, multi-dimensional,multi modal and substructur allogics. Intensive re-examinations offragments of classical logic have produced fresh insights,includingat time decision procedures and equivalence with non-classical systems
Logics in Artificial Intelligence ; 11th European Conference, JELIA 2008, Dresden, Germany, September 28-October 1, 2008. Proceedings
Constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 11th European Conference on Logics in Artificial Intelligence, JELIA 2008, held in Dresden, Germany, Liverpool, in September/October 2008.The 32 revised full papers presented together with 2 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 98 submissions. The papers cover a broad range of topics including belief revision, description logics, non-monotonic reasoning, multi-agent systems, probabilistic logic, and temporal logic.
Analysis and Synthesis of Logics : How to Cut and Paste Reasoning Systems
Starting with simple examples showing the relevance of cutting and pasting logics, the monograph develops a mathematical theory of combining and decomposing logics, ranging from propositional and first-order based logics to higher-order based logics as well as to non-truth functional logics. The theory covers mechanisms for combining semantic structures and deductive systems either of the same or different nature (for instance, two Hilbert calculi or a Hilbert calculus and a tableau calculus). The important issue of preservation of properties is extensively addressed. For instance, sufficient conditions are provided for a combined logic to be sound and complete when the original component logics are known to be sound and complete.


