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- Unification in first order logic - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Why should unification in first order logic be limited to unification of first order terms? In first order logic, when unification is defined as a equation, it does not consider unification of formula which contains quantifier In this case, why unification type of first order logic is unitary?
- logic: unification of a formula - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The Unification Algorithm is described at page 84 You have to recall the resolution calculus [page 29] : Resolution is a simple syntactic transformation applied to formulas From two given formulas in a resolution step (provided resolution is applicable to the formulas), a third formula is generated
- Unification of an expression : Example - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Unification of an expression : Example Ask Question Asked 5 years, 5 months ago Modified 5 years, 5 months ago
- Is it possible to use Unification for lambda calculus?
I haven't though this through, but I think the answer is yes, but that the unification algorithm may not terminate, and that determining if it terminates for a particular case is as difficult as the general halting problem Usually the thing we like about unification algorithms is that they always terminate, because they do structural recursion on the input term
- What is How to do Unification - Mathematics Stack Exchange
In a now deleted answer, sunflower gave a unification algorithm which has an explicit rule to that effect: "The unification of two functors with different name or arity fails "
- Use unification and resolution to justify proof
Resolution and unification are important in logic programming if you want to understand how the inference engine works
- Substitution To Find Most General Unifier - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The usual simple unification algorithm will generate an mgu; basically just pick the simplest unification (unify variables to variables, not to some other constants ground terms)
- Clarifications about dirac delta - Mathematics Stack Exchange
The (initial) purpose of atomic measures such as the Dirac one is the unification of discrete summation and continuous integration as a single object for probability theory
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