I’m not sure if this kind of logic already exists as I don’t have access to the research in this field, but I have an axiomatization of an extension of Intuitionistic Logic. Here is an incomplete axiomatization that I am currently patching up.
Roughly, if the standard Intuitionistic negation holds at a state $s$, then at every state $w$ accessible from $s$, the formula under the scope of the negation does not hold. If the weaker negation holds at $s$, then there is some state $y$ to which $s$ has access, such that the formula under the scope of the weak negation does not hold at $y$. Here I use capital English letters to refer to arbitrary formulas in the extended language; further I use “~” for Intuitionistic negation and “¬” for weak negation. Below I have a possibly incomplete axiomatization for this logic, which contains Modus Ponens as its only inference rule.
(P⟹(Q⟹R))⟹((P⟹Q)⟹(P⟹R))
P⟹(Q⟹P) condition 1
(P⟹∼P)⟹∼P
∼P⟹(P⟹Q)
¬∼P⟹¬¬P condition 1
(¬P⟹P)⟹P
(P⟹Q)⟹(¬Q⟹¬P)
(P⟹R)⟹((P⟹Q)⟹(P⟹(Q∧R)))
The standard axioms for disjunction, quantifiers, and conjunction elimination are also included in this logic, but I left them out for brevity.
Condition 1 is met iff “P” is either
an atomic formula that does not have “¬“ as its main operator or
an implication or
a disjunction or conjunction such that each of the sub-formulas in P meets condition 1.
What makes this logic difficult to axiomatize is that there is no Deduction Theorem for an arbitrary formula. For example, ¬P,R⊢¬P, but ¬P⊬R⟹¬P. This is also the reason our conjunction introduction axiom is not the standard one. Further, any substitution of a formula into a theorem must be proven to be valid. E.g., ⊬~(~(~¬P))⟹~¬P, even though for any condition 1 formula it holds that
⊢~(~(~P))⟹~P. Further, I need to formally prove that condition 1 is sufficient for soundness. (Edit: I added parentheses to the above examples, since the formulas did not post correctly.) Finally, I think the main issue is the semantic definition of disjunction. In this logic ⊨Pv¬P, but the semantic definition for disjunction is that Γ⊨AvB iff Γ⊨A or
Γ⊨B for a set of sentences Γ.