3.4.7 Accidental Bindings

A problem for -based semantic construction: Accidental bindings.

Before we can put -calculus to use in an implementation, we still have to deal with one rather technical point: Sometimes we have to pay a little bit of attention which variable names we use. Suppose that the expression in is a complex expression containing many operators. Now, it could happen that when we apply a functor to an argument , some occurrence of a variable that is is free in becomes bound when we substitute it into .

For example when we construct the semantic representation for the verb phrase ``loves a woman'', syntactic analysis of the phrase could lead to the representation:

-reducing three times yields:

Notice that the variable occurs -bound as well as existentially bound in this expression. In it is bound by , while in and it is bound by . So far, this has not been a problem. But look what happens when we -convert once more:

has been moved inside the scope of . In result, the occurence of has been 'caught' by the existential quantifier, and doesn't bind any occurence of a variable at all any more. Now we -convert one last time and get:

We've got an empty -abstraction, made out of a formula that means something like ``A woman loves herself''. That's not what we want to have. Such accidental bindings (as they are usually called) defeat the purpose of working with the -calculus. The whole point of developing the - calculus was to gain control over the process of performing substitutions. We don't want to lose control by foolishly allowing unintended interactions.


Aljoscha Burchardt, Stephan Walter, Alexander Koller, Michael Kohlhase, Patrick Blackburn and Johan Bos
Version 1.2.5 (20030212)