Abstract. Proof complexity is an interdisciplinary area of research utilizing techniques from logic, complexity, and combinatorics towards the main aim of understanding the complexity of theorem proving procedures. Traditionally, propositional proofs have been the main object of investigation in proof complexity. Due their richer expressivity and numerous applications within computer science, also non-classical logics have been intensively studied from a proof complexity perspective in the last decade, and a number of impressive results have been obtained. In this paper we give the first survey of this field concentrating on recent developments in proof complexity of non-classical logics.
Propositional Proof ComplexityOne of the starting points of propositional proof complexity is the seminal paper of Cook and Reckhow [CR79] where they formalized propositional proof systems as polynomial-time computable functions which have as their range the set of all propositional tautologies. In that paper, Cook and Reckhow also observed a fundamental connection between lengths of proofs and the separation of complexity classes: they showed that there exists a propositional proof system which has polynomial-size proofs for all tautologies (a polynomially bounded proof system) if and only if the class NP is closed under complementation. From this observation the so called Cook-Reckhow programme was derived which serves as one of the major motivations for propositional proof complexity: to separate NP from coNP (and hence P from NP) it suffices to show super-polynomial lower bounds to the size of proofs in all propositional proof systems.Although the first super-polynomial lower bound to the lengths of proofs had already been shown by Tseitin in the late 60's for a sub-system of resolution [Tse68], the first major achievement in this programme was made by Haken in 1985 when he showed an exponential lower bound to the proof size in Resolution for a sequence of propositional formulas describing the pigeonhole principle [Hak85]. In the last two decades these lower bounds were extended to a number of further propositional systems such as the