Beyond Ability: The Four-Fold Spectrum of Power and the Logic of Full Inability
Abstract
Coalition Logic studies what coalitions can enforce. Recent work treats inability as simple non-ability: C. This conflates two distinct configurations -- a coalition unable to force may still force , retaining adversarial control rather than genuine inability. We introduce Full Inability (): the symmetric condition in which a coalition can enforce neither a proposition nor its negation. Combining coalitional effectivity with propositional negation yields a four-fold spectrum: Full Control (), Positive Determination (), Adverse Determination (), and Full Inability (). These categories partition a coalition's strategic status exhaustively and exclusively. We establish their algebraic and order-theoretic structure. Under α-duality, propositional negation and coalition complementation generate a Klein four-group symmetry. In playable models, the four power regions are order-convex in the powerset lattice, yielding interval-stable verification of inability. We axiomatize , a definitional extension treating Full Inability as a primitive modality. Via elimination translation, we prove soundness, completeness, and conservativity over Coalition Logic. The extension preserves expressive power and complexity (-complete), but provides direct proof-theoretic access to symmetric inability, strategic dependence, propositional dummyhood, and containment verification.
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