Events in 2025-2026 Fall Semester
Abstract:
In game theory, an elementary and fundamental class of games is impartial combinatorial games (ICGs). The majority of classical and interesting ICGs are LIA-definable and terminating. One of the challenging and long-standing problems of ICGs is to compute winning strategies for possibly infinite number of winning states. To this end, we first propose a logical framework to formalize ICGs based on the linear integer arithmetic fragment of numeric part of PDDL. We then propose two approaches to generating the winning formula that exactly captures the states in which the player can force to win. Furthermore, we compute winning strategies for ICGs based on the winning formula. Experimental results on several games demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.
Abstract:
In game theory, an elementary and fundamental class of games is impartial combinatorial games (ICGs). The majority of classical and interesting ICGs are LIA-definable and terminating. One of the challenging and long-standing problems of ICGs is to compute winning strategies for possibly infinite number of winning states. To this end, we first propose a logical framework to formalize ICGs based on the linear integer arithmetic fragment of numeric part of PDDL. We then propose two approaches to generating the winning formula that exactly captures the states in which the player can force to win. Furthermore, we compute winning strategies for ICGs based on the winning formula. Experimental results on several games demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.
Abstract:
In this paper I apply the new Pragmatics to Assertions. Contrary to the prevalent perspective of viewing assertions, viz., epistemic, I argue that assertions are Pragmatic and moreover, are constitutively Pragmatic (in the type of Pragmatics to which our specific Pragmatics belongs). This perspective will cast a new light on whether there is a constitutive Epistemic Norm of Assertion (Williamson). We’ll explore various new features of assertions, viewed from this perspective.
Abstract:
In this paper I apply the new Pragmatics to Assertions. Contrary to the prevalent perspective of viewing assertions, viz., epistemic, I argue that assertions are Pragmatic and moreover, are constitutively Pragmatic (in the type of Pragmatics to which our specific Pragmatics belongs). This perspective will cast a new light on whether there is a constitutive Epistemic Norm of Assertion (Williamson). We’ll explore various new features of assertions, viewed from this perspective.
Abstract:
Bi-intuitionistic logic is intuitionistic logic with co-implication , which is a logical connective dual to usual implication. Roughly speaking, while
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must hold between conjunction and implication,
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must hold between disjunction and co-implication. In classical logic, as means , nothing interesting will occur by introducing co-implication. The main aim of my talk is to examine how intuitionistic world will be affected by the introduction of co-implication, by checking basic logical properties of extensions of BiInt in comparison with those of extensions of intuitionistic logic.
First, we will discuss the subject from syntactical aspects, that include (cut-free) sequent formulation, (local) deduction theorems, and also negative translation. Next we will focus our attention on the symmetry features peculiar to extensions of BiInt. It is pointed out that an interesting duality exists between a given logic and its mirror image, which can preserves some interesting logical properties. Also, algebraic approaches based on bi-Heyting algebras will be discussed.
Events in 2024-2025 Spring Semester
Abstract:
Scholars have long been captivated by repetitive and parallel structures in early Chinese texts. They have described, classified and defined repetitive and parallel figures in these texts and offered explanations of the function and operating principles of these figures. This talk critically engages with such explanations and explores new pathways of analysis in this field. In a first part, the talk provides a short historical overview of methods and theories that explain literary repetitions and parallelisms either as a reflection of structures that exist outside of the texts or with regard to their literary effects on the readers. Subsequently, the talk offers an own approach emphasising time and space aspects of repetitive and parallel structures in early Chinese philosophical texts, arguing that such structures construct a spatial dimension in these texts. In doing so, the talk argues, they go beyond what Ricoeur calls the “Model of the Text” and produce textual objects more akin to the spatial mode of visual objects and ritual performances. In its final part, the talk conducts an analysis of visual materials to illustrate how they reinforce, complement, or even inspire novel perspectives on the geometrical logic of repetition and parallelism within texts. It first explores scholarly conceptual discourse surrounding repetition and parallelism in ornamentation before finally turning to an analysis of Han mural art to discuss basic principles of composition in early Chinese textual and visual art and the roles that repetition and parallelism play to construct meaning therein.
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