In structural proof theory, an analytical proof is a proof whose structure is simple in a special way. The term does not admit an uncontroversial definition, but for several proof calculi there is an accepted notion of analytic proof. For example:
However it is possible to extend both calculi so that there are proofs that satisfy the condition but are not analytic: a particularly tricky example of this is the analytic cut rule: this is a special case of the cut rule where the cut formula is a subformula of side formulae of the cut rule; a proof that contains an analytic cut is by virtue of that rule not analytic.
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"Analytic proof".
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