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Handbook of the History of Logic brings to the development of logic the best in modern techniques of historical and interpretative scholarship. Computational logic was born in t… Read more
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Immediately download your ebook while waiting for your print delivery. No promo code needed.
Handbook of the History of Logic brings to the development of logic the best in modern techniques of historical and interpretative scholarship. Computational logic was born in the twentieth century and evolved in close symbiosis with the advent of the first electronic computers and the growing importance of computer science, informatics and artificial intelligence. With more than ten thousand people working in research and development of logic and logic-related methods, with several dozen international conferences and several times as many workshops addressing the growing richness and diversity of the field, and with the foundational role and importance these methods now assume in mathematics, computer science, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, linguistics, law and many engineering fields where logic-related techniques are used inter alia to state and settle correctness issues, the field has diversified in ways that even the pure logicians working in the early decades of the twentieth century could have hardly anticipated.
Logical calculi, which capture an important aspect of human thought, are now amenable to investigation with mathematical rigour and computational support and fertilized the early dreams of mechanised reasoning: “Calculemus”. The Dartmouth Conference in 1956 – generally considered as the birthplace of artificial intelligence – raised explicitly the hopes for the new possibilities that the advent of electronic computing machinery offered: logical statements could now be executed on a machine with all the far-reaching consequences that ultimately led to logic programming, deduction systems for mathematics and engineering, logical design and verification of computer software and hardware, deductive databases and software synthesis as well as logical techniques for analysis in the field of mechanical engineering. This volume covers some of the main subareas of computational logic and its applications.
Researchers, and graduate and senior undergraduate students in logic AI and computer science, cognitive psychology and neuroscience, linguistics, forensics, philosophy and the history of philosophy, and the history of ideas
INTRODUCTION
1. Computational Logic, Jörg Siekmann
2. Logic and the Development of the Computer, Martin Davis
GENERAL
3. What is a Logical System? An Evolutionary View: 1964-2014, Dov Gabbay
AUTOMATED REASONING
4. Interactive Theorem Proving, John R. Harrison, Josef Urban, Frederik Wiedijk
5. Automation of Higher Order Logic, Christoph Benzmüller, Dale Miller
6. Equational Logics and Rewriting, Claude Kirchner, Helene Kirchner
7. Possibilistic Logic An Overview, Didier Dubois, Henri Prade
8. Computerizing Mathematical Text, Fairouz Kamareddine, Joe Wells, Christoph Zengler and Henk Barendregt
SPECIFICATION and VERIFICATION
9. Concurrency Theory: A Historical Perspective on Coinduction and Process Calculi, Jos Baeten, Davide Sangiorgi
10. Logical Synthesis of Reactive Systems - from Church's Problem to Modern Applications, Bernd Finkbeiner
COMPUTER SCIENCE
11. Degrees of Unsolvability, Klaus Ambos-Spies, Peter A. Fejer
12. Computational Complexity, Lance Fortnow, Steven Homer
13. Logic Programming, Bob Kowalski
14. Logic and Databases, Jack Minker, Dietmar Seipel, Carlo Zaniolo
15. Logics for Intelligent Agents and Multi Agent Systems, John-Jules Meyer
16. Description Logics, Matthias Knorr, Pascal Hitzler
17. Logics for the Semantic Web, Pascal Hitzler, Jens Lehmann, Axel Polleres
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