Homeomorphism and the Equivalence of Logical Systems
Stephen Pollard
Source: Notre Dame J. Formal Logic Volume 39, Number 3 (1998), 422-435.
Abstract
Say that a property is topological if and only if it is invariant under homeomorphism. Homeomorphism would be a successful criterion for the equivalence of logical systems only if every logically significant property of every logical system were topological. Alas, homeomorphisms are sometimes insensitive to distinctions that logicians value: properties such as functional completeness are not topological. So logics are not just devices for exploring closure topologies. One still wonders, though, how much of logic is topological. This essay examines some logically significant properties that are topological (or are topological in some important class). In the process, we learn something about the conditions under which the meaning of a connective can be "given by the connective's role in inference."
Full-text: Access granted (open access)
Permanent link to this document: http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.ndjfl/1039182255
Mathematical Reviews number (MathSciNet):
MR1741547
Digital Object Identifier: doi:10.1305/ndjfl/1039182255
Zentralblatt MATH identifier:
0967.03007
Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic