The Edinburgh Logical Framework (LF) provides a means to define (or present) logics. It is based on a general treatment of syntax, rules, and proofs by means of a typed λ-calculus with dependent types. Syntax is treated in a style similar to, but more general than, Martin-Löf's system of arities. The treatment of rules and proofs focuses on his notion of a judgement. Logics are represented in LF via a new principle, the judgements as types principle, whereby each judgement is identified with the type of its proofs. This allows for a smooth treatment of discharge and variable occurrence conditions and leads to a uniform treatment of rules and proofs whereby rules are viewed as proofs of higher-order judgements and proof checking is reduced to type checking. The practical benefit of our treatment of formal systems is that logic-independent tools such as proof editors and proof checkers can be constructed.
We present a logical framework for reasoning on a very general class of languages featuring binding operators, called nominal algebras, presented in higher-order abstract syntax (HOAS). is based on an axiomatic syntactic standpoint and it consists of a simple types theory a la Church extended with a set of axioms called the Theory of Contexts, recursion operators and induction principles. This framework is rather expressive and, most notably, the axioms of the Theory of Contexts allow for a smooth reasoning of schemata in HOAS. An advantage of this framework is that it requires a very low mathematical and logical overhead. Some case studies and comparison with related work are briefly discussed
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