Geometrisation of First-Order Logic
- Creators
- Dyckhoff R.
- Negri S.
- Others:
- Dyckhoff, R.
- Negri, S.
Description
That every first-order theory has a coherent conservative extension is regarded by some as obvious, even trivial, and by others as not at all obvious, but instead remarkable and valuable; the result is in any case neither sufficiently well-known nor easily found in the literature. Various approaches to the result are presented and discussed in detail, including one inspired by a problem in the proof theory of intermediate logics that led us to the proof of the present paper. It can be seen as a modification of Skolem's argument from 1920 for his Normal Form theorem. Geometric being the infinitary version of coherent, it is further shown that every infinitary first-order theory, suitably restricted, has a geometric conservative extension, hence the title. The results are applied to simplify methods used in reasoning in and about modal and intermediate logics. We include also a new algorithm to generate special coherent implications from an axiom, designed to preserve the structure of formulae with relatively little use of normal forms.
Additional details
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/995798
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/995798
- Origin repository
- UNIGE