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  5. Automating Reasoning in an Implementation of Constructive Type Theory

Automating Reasoning in an Implementation of Constructive Type Theory

File(s)
88-925.ps (3.03 MB)
88-925.pdf (17.33 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/6765
Collections
Computer Science Technical Reports
Author
Howe, Douglas J.
Abstract

The starting point for this thesis is the Nuprl proof development system. Nuprl is an environment for the development of formal computational mathematics and has a rich constructive type theory as a logical basis. It provides sophisticated editors and an integrated tactic mechanism that allows the programming of guaranteed-sound extensions to the inference system. The work presented in this thesis concerns the automation of reasoning in Nuprl, and consists of three parts. The first is a collection of general-purpose tactics. These tactics are simple enough that their function can be readily understood, yet powerful enough to support development of substantial formal mathematics. The second part is the use of Nuprl to solve an open problem in the theory of programming languages. The set of basic tactics together with various tools provided by Nuprl play a crucial role in the solution, and it seems that this problem is not tractable without computer assistance. The third part is an implementation within Nuprl of mechanisms that support the use of Nuprl's type theory as a language for constructing theorem-proving procedures. The main component of the implementation is a large library of definitions, theorems and proofs. This library may be regarded as the beginning of a book of formal mathematics; it contains a complete formal development and explanation of a useful subset of Nuprl's metatheory, and of a mechanism for translating results established about this embedded metatheory to the object level. The type theory, besides permitting the internal development of this partial reflection mechanism, allows us to make abstractions that drastically reduce the burden of establishing the correctness of new theorem-proving procedures. Our library includes a formally verified term-rewriting system.

Date Issued
1988-06
Publisher
Cornell University
Keywords
computer science
•
technical report
Previously Published as
http://techreports.library.cornell.edu:8081/Dienst/UI/1.0/Display/cul.cs/TR88-925
Type
technical report

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