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Structural rule

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In proof theory, a structural rule is an inference rule that does not refer to any logical connective, but instead operates on the judgements or sequents directly. Structural rules often mimic intended meta-theoretic properties of the logic. Logics that deny one or more of the structural rules are classified as substructural logics.

The following are some common structural rules:

  • Weakening, where the hypotheses or conclusion of a sequent may be extended with additional members. In symbolic form weakening rules can be written as on the left of the turnstile, and on the right.
  • Contraction, where two equal (or unifiable) members on the same side of a sequent may be replaced by a single member (or common instance). Symbolically: and . Also known as factoring in theorem proving systems using resolution.
  • Exchange, where two members on the same side of a sequent may be swapped. Symbolically: and .

A logic without any of the above structural rules would interpret the sides of a sequent as pure sequences; with exchange, they are multisets; and with both contraction and exchange they are sets.

A famous structural rule is known as cut. Considerable effort is spent by proof theorists in showing that cut rules are superfluous in various logics. Removal of cut rules, known as cut elimination, is directly related to the philosophy of computation as normalization (see lambda calculus); it often gives a good indication of the complexity of deciding a given logic.

See also