PodcastScienzeIowa Type Theory Commute

Iowa Type Theory Commute

Aaron Stump
Iowa Type Theory Commute
Ultimo episodio

180 episodi

  • Iowa Type Theory Commute

    What is Control Flow Analysis for Lambda Calculus?

    16/01/2026 | 19 min
    I am currently on a frolic into the literature on Control Flow Analysis (CFA), and discuss what this is, for pure lambda calculus.  A wonderful reference for this is this paper by Palsberg.
  • Iowa Type Theory Commute

    Measure Functions and Termination of STLC

    14/11/2025 | 21 min
    In this episode, I talk about what we should consider to be a measure function.  Such functions can be used to show termination of some process or program, by assigning a measure to each program, and showing that as the program computes, the measure decreases in some well-founded ordering.  But what should count as a measure function?  The context for this is RTA Open Problem 19, on showing termination for the simply typed lambda calculus using a measure function.
    Let's call this the start of season 7, because it seems about time for that.
  • Iowa Type Theory Commute

    Schematic Affine Recursion, Oh My!

    22/08/2025 | 18 min
    To solve the problem raised in the last episode, I propose schematic affine recursion.  We saw that affine lambda calculus (where lambda-bound variables are used at most once) plus structural recursion does not enforce termination, even if you restrict the recursor so that the function to be iterated is closed when you reduce ("closed at reduction").  You have to restrict it so that recursion terms are disallowed entirely unless the function to be iterated is closed ("closed at construction").  But this prevents higher-order functions like map, which need to repeat a computation involving a variable f to be mapped over the elements of a list.  The solution is to allow schematic definition of terms, using schema variables ranging over closed terms.
  • Iowa Type Theory Commute

    The Stunner: Linear System T is Diverging!

    19/08/2025 | 21 min
    In this episode, I shoot down last episode's proposal -- at least in the version I discussed -- based on an amazing observation from an astonishing paper, "Gödel’s system T revisited", by Alves, Fernández, Florido, and Mackie.  Linear System T is diverging, as they reveal through a short but clever example.  It is even diverging if one requires that the iterator can only be reduced when the function to be iterated is closed (no free variables).  This extraordinary observation does not sink Victor's idea of basing type theory on a terminating untyped core language, but it does sink the specific language he and I were thinking about, namely affine lambda calculus plus structural recursion.

    My notes are here.
  • Iowa Type Theory Commute

    Terminating Computation First?

    01/08/2025 | 11 min
    In this episode, I discuss an intriguing idea proposed by Victor Taelin, to base a logically sound type theory on an untyped but terminating language, upon which one may then erect as exotic a type system as one wishes.  By enforcing termination already for the untyped language, we no longer have to make the type system do the heavy work of enforcing termination.

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Su Iowa Type Theory Commute

Aaron Stump talks about type theory, computational logic, and related topics in Computer Science on his short commute.
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