Exponentially Huge Natural Deduction proofs are Redundant: Preliminary results on M_⊃
We estimate the size of a labelled tree by comparing the amount of (labelled) nodes with the size of the set of labels. Roughly speaking, a exponentially big labelled tree, is any labelled tree that has an exponential gap between its size, number of nodes, and the size of its labelling set. The number of sub-formulas of any formula is linear on the size of it, and hence any exponentially big proof has a size a^n, where a>1 and n is the size of its conclusion. In this article, we show that the linearly height labelled trees whose sizes have an exponential gap with the size of their labelling sets posses at least one sub-tree that occurs exponentially many times in them. Natural Deduction proofs and derivations in minimal implicational logic (M_⊃) are essentially labelled trees. By the sub-formula principle any normal derivation of a formula α from a set of formulas Γ={γ_1,...,γ_n} in M_⊃, establishing Γ_M_⊃α, has only sub-formulas of the formulas α,γ_1,...,γ_n occurring in it. By this relationship between labelled trees and derivations in M_⊃, we show that any normal proof of a tautology in M_⊃ that is exponential on the size of its conclusion has a sub-proof that occurs exponentially many times in it. Thus, any normal and linearly height bounded proof in M_⊃ is inherently redundant. Finally, we briefly discuss the relationship of this result with the conjecture NP=PSPACE and how this redundancy provide us with a highly efficient compression method for propositional proofs. We also provide some examples that serve to convince us that exponentially big proofs are more frequent than one can imagine.
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