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Branching quantifier

In logic a branching quantifier,[1] also called a Henkin quantifier, finite partially ordered quantifier or even nonlinear quantifier, is a partial ordering[2]

of quantifiers for Q ∈ {∀,∃}. It is a special case of generalized quantifier. In classical logic, quantifier prefixes are linearly ordered such that the value of a variable ym bound by a quantifier Qm depends on the value of the variables

y1, ..., ym−1

bound by quantifiers

Qy1, ..., Qym−1

preceding Qm. In a logic with (finite) partially ordered quantification this is not in general the case.

Branching quantification first appeared in a 1959 conference paper of Leon Henkin.[3] Systems of partially ordered quantification are intermediate in strength between first-order logic and second-order logic. They are being used as a basis for Hintikka's and Gabriel Sandu's independence-friendly logic.

Definition and properties edit

The simplest Henkin quantifier   is

 

It (in fact every formula with a Henkin prefix, not just the simplest one) is equivalent to its second-order Skolemization, i.e.

 

It is also powerful enough to define the quantifier   (i.e. "there are infinitely many") defined as

 

Several things follow from this, including the nonaxiomatizability of first-order logic with   (first observed by Ehrenfeucht), and its equivalence to the  -fragment of second-order logic (existential second-order logic)—the latter result published independently in 1970 by Herbert Enderton[4] and W. Walkoe.[5]

The following quantifiers are also definable by  .[2]

  • Rescher: "The number of φs is less than or equal to the number of ψs"
 
  • Härtig: "The φs are equinumerous with the ψs"
 
  • Chang: "The number of φs is equinumerous with the domain of the model"
 

The Henkin quantifier   can itself be expressed as a type (4) Lindström quantifier.[2]

Relation to natural languages edit

Hintikka in a 1973 paper[6] advanced the hypothesis that some sentences in natural languages are best understood in terms of branching quantifiers, for example: "some relative of each villager and some relative of each townsman hate each other" is supposed to be interpreted, according to Hintikka, as:[7][8]

 

which is known to have no first-order logic equivalent.[7]

The idea of branching is not necessarily restricted to using the classical quantifiers as leaves. In a 1979 paper,[9] Jon Barwise proposed variations of Hintikka sentences (as the above is sometimes called) in which the inner quantifiers are themselves generalized quantifiers, for example: "Most villagers and most townsmen hate each other."[7] Observing that   is not closed under negation, Barwise also proposed a practical test to determine whether natural language sentences really involve branching quantifiers, namely to test whether their natural-language negation involves universal quantification over a set variable (a   sentence).[10]

Hintikka's proposal was met with skepticism by a number of logicians because some first-order sentences like the one below appear to capture well enough the natural language Hintikka sentence.

 

where

 

denotes

 

Although much purely theoretical debate followed, it wasn't until 2009 that some empirical tests with students trained in logic found that they are more likely to assign models matching the "bidirectional" first-order sentence rather than branching-quantifier sentence to several natural-language constructs derived from the Hintikka sentence. For instance students were shown undirected bipartite graphs—with squares and circles as vertices—and asked to say whether sentences like "more than 3 circles and more than 3 squares are connected by lines" were correctly describing the diagrams.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Stanley Peters; Dag Westerståhl (2006). Quantifiers in language and logic. Clarendon Press. pp. 66–72. ISBN 978-0-19-929125-0.
  2. ^ a b c Antonio Badia (2009). Quantifiers in Action: Generalized Quantification in Query, Logical and Natural Languages. Springer. p. 74–76. ISBN 978-0-387-09563-9.
  3. ^ Henkin, L. "Some Remarks on Infinitely Long Formulas". Infinitistic Methods: Proceedings of the Symposium on Foundations of Mathematics, Warsaw, 2–9 September 1959, Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe and Pergamon Press, Warsaw, 1961, pp. 167–183. OCLC 2277863
  4. ^ Jaakko Hintikka and Gabriel Sandu, "Game-theoretical semantics", in Handbook of logic and language, ed. J. van Benthem and A. ter Meulen, Elsevier 2011 (2nd ed.) citing Enderton, H.B., 1970. Finite partially-ordered quantifiers. Z. Math. Logik Grundlag. Math. 16, 393–397 doi:10.1002/malq.19700160802.
  5. ^ Blass, A.; Gurevich, Y. (1986). "Henkin quantifiers and complete problems" (PDF). Annals of Pure and Applied Logic. 32: 1–16. doi:10.1016/0168-0072(86)90040-0. hdl:2027.42/26312. citing W. Walkoe, Finite partially-ordered quantification, Journal of Symbolic Logic 35 (1970) 535–555. JSTOR 2271440
  6. ^ Hintikka, J. (1973). "Quantifiers vs. Quantification Theory". Dialectica. 27 (3–4): 329–358. doi:10.1111/j.1746-8361.1973.tb00624.x.
  7. ^ a b c d Gierasimczuk, N.; Szymanik, J. (2009). "Branching Quantification v. Two-way Quantification" (PDF). Journal of Semantics. 26 (4): 367. doi:10.1093/jos/ffp008.
  8. ^ Sher, G. (1990). "Ways of branching quantifers" (PDF). Linguistics and Philosophy. 13 (4): 393–422. doi:10.1007/BF00630749. S2CID 61362436.
  9. ^ Barwise, J. (1979). "On branching quantifiers in English". Journal of Philosophical Logic. 8: 47–80. doi:10.1007/BF00258419. S2CID 31950692.
  10. ^ Hand, Michael (1998). "Reviewed work: On Branching Quantifiers in English, Jon Barwise; Branching Generalized Quantifiers and Natural Language. Generalized Quantifiers, Linguistic and Logical Approaches, Dag Westerståhl, Peter Gärdenfors; Ways of Branching Quantifiers, Gila Sher". The Journal of Symbolic Logic. 63 (4): 1611–1614. doi:10.2307/2586678. JSTOR 2586678. S2CID 117833401.

External links edit

  • at PlanetMath.

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In logic a branching quantifier 1 also called a Henkin quantifier finite partially ordered quantifier or even nonlinear quantifier is a partial ordering 2 Q x 1 Q x n displaystyle langle Qx 1 dots Qx n rangle of quantifiers for Q It is a special case of generalized quantifier In classical logic quantifier prefixes are linearly ordered such that the value of a variable ym bound by a quantifier Qm depends on the value of the variables y1 ym 1bound by quantifiers Qy1 Qym 1preceding Qm In a logic with finite partially ordered quantification this is not in general the case Branching quantification first appeared in a 1959 conference paper of Leon Henkin 3 Systems of partially ordered quantification are intermediate in strength between first order logic and second order logic They are being used as a basis for Hintikka s and Gabriel Sandu s independence friendly logic Contents 1 Definition and properties 2 Relation to natural languages 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksDefinition and properties editThe simplest Henkin quantifier Q H displaystyle Q H nbsp is Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 f x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 f x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 displaystyle Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 varphi x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 equiv begin pmatrix forall x 1 exists y 1 forall x 2 exists y 2 end pmatrix varphi x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 nbsp It in fact every formula with a Henkin prefix not just the simplest one is equivalent to its second order Skolemization i e f g x 1 x 2 f x 1 x 2 f x 1 g x 2 displaystyle exists f exists g forall x 1 forall x 2 varphi x 1 x 2 f x 1 g x 2 nbsp It is also powerful enough to define the quantifier Q N displaystyle Q geq mathbb N nbsp i e there are infinitely many defined as Q N x f x a Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 f a x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 f x 1 f y 1 y 1 a displaystyle Q geq mathbb N x varphi x equiv exists a Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 varphi a land x 1 x 2 leftrightarrow y 1 y 2 land varphi x 1 rightarrow varphi y 1 land y 1 neq a nbsp Several things follow from this including the nonaxiomatizability of first order logic with Q H displaystyle Q H nbsp first observed by Ehrenfeucht and its equivalence to the S 1 1 displaystyle Sigma 1 1 nbsp fragment of second order logic existential second order logic the latter result published independently in 1970 by Herbert Enderton 4 and W Walkoe 5 The following quantifiers are also definable by Q H displaystyle Q H nbsp 2 Rescher The number of fs is less than or equal to the number of pss Q L x f x ps x Card x f x Card x ps x Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 f x 1 ps y 1 displaystyle Q L x varphi x psi x equiv operatorname Card x colon varphi x leq operatorname Card x colon psi x equiv Q H x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 x 1 x 2 leftrightarrow y 1 y 2 land varphi x 1 rightarrow psi y 1 nbsp dd Hartig The fs are equinumerous with the pss Q I x f x ps x Q L x f x ps x Q L x ps x f x displaystyle Q I x varphi x psi x equiv Q L x varphi x psi x land Q L x psi x varphi x nbsp dd Chang The number of fs is equinumerous with the domain of the model Q C x f x Q L x x x f x displaystyle Q C x varphi x equiv Q L x x x varphi x nbsp dd The Henkin quantifier Q H displaystyle Q H nbsp can itself be expressed as a type 4 Lindstrom quantifier 2 Relation to natural languages editHintikka in a 1973 paper 6 advanced the hypothesis that some sentences in natural languages are best understood in terms of branching quantifiers for example some relative of each villager and some relative of each townsman hate each other is supposed to be interpreted according to Hintikka as 7 8 x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 V x 1 T x 2 R x 1 y 1 R x 2 y 2 H y 1 y 2 H y 2 y 1 displaystyle begin pmatrix forall x 1 exists y 1 forall x 2 exists y 2 end pmatrix V x 1 wedge T x 2 rightarrow R x 1 y 1 wedge R x 2 y 2 wedge H y 1 y 2 wedge H y 2 y 1 nbsp which is known to have no first order logic equivalent 7 The idea of branching is not necessarily restricted to using the classical quantifiers as leaves In a 1979 paper 9 Jon Barwise proposed variations of Hintikka sentences as the above is sometimes called in which the inner quantifiers are themselves generalized quantifiers for example Most villagers and most townsmen hate each other 7 Observing that S 1 1 displaystyle Sigma 1 1 nbsp is not closed under negation Barwise also proposed a practical test to determine whether natural language sentences really involve branching quantifiers namely to test whether their natural language negation involves universal quantification over a set variable a P 1 1 displaystyle Pi 1 1 nbsp sentence 10 Hintikka s proposal was met with skepticism by a number of logicians because some first order sentences like the one below appear to capture well enough the natural language Hintikka sentence x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 f x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 x 2 y 2 x 1 y 1 f x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 displaystyle forall x 1 exists y 1 forall x 2 exists y 2 varphi x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 wedge forall x 2 exists y 2 forall x 1 exists y 1 varphi x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 nbsp where f x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 displaystyle varphi x 1 x 2 y 1 y 2 nbsp denotes V x 1 T x 2 R x 1 y 1 R x 2 y 2 H y 1 y 2 H y 2 y 1 displaystyle V x 1 wedge T x 2 rightarrow R x 1 y 1 wedge R x 2 y 2 wedge H y 1 y 2 wedge H y 2 y 1 nbsp Although much purely theoretical debate followed it wasn t until 2009 that some empirical tests with students trained in logic found that they are more likely to assign models matching the bidirectional first order sentence rather than branching quantifier sentence to several natural language constructs derived from the Hintikka sentence For instance students were shown undirected bipartite graphs with squares and circles as vertices and asked to say whether sentences like more than 3 circles and more than 3 squares are connected by lines were correctly describing the diagrams 7 See also editGame semantics Dependence logic Independence friendly logic IF logic Mostowski quantifier Lindstrom quantifier NonfirstorderizabilityReferences edit Stanley Peters Dag Westerstahl 2006 Quantifiers in language and logic Clarendon Press pp 66 72 ISBN 978 0 19 929125 0 a b c Antonio Badia 2009 Quantifiers in Action Generalized Quantification in Query Logical and Natural Languages Springer p 74 76 ISBN 978 0 387 09563 9 Henkin L Some Remarks on Infinitely Long Formulas Infinitistic Methods Proceedings of the Symposium on Foundations of Mathematics Warsaw 2 9 September 1959 Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe and Pergamon Press Warsaw 1961 pp 167 183 OCLC 2277863 Jaakko Hintikka and Gabriel Sandu Game theoretical semantics in Handbook of logic and language ed J van Benthem and A ter Meulen Elsevier 2011 2nd ed citing Enderton H B 1970 Finite partially ordered quantifiers Z Math Logik Grundlag Math 16 393 397 doi 10 1002 malq 19700160802 Blass A Gurevich Y 1986 Henkin quantifiers and complete problems PDF Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 32 1 16 doi 10 1016 0168 0072 86 90040 0 hdl 2027 42 26312 citing W Walkoe Finite partially ordered quantification Journal of Symbolic Logic 35 1970 535 555 JSTOR 2271440 Hintikka J 1973 Quantifiers vs Quantification Theory Dialectica 27 3 4 329 358 doi 10 1111 j 1746 8361 1973 tb00624 x a b c d Gierasimczuk N Szymanik J 2009 Branching Quantification v Two way Quantification PDF Journal of Semantics 26 4 367 doi 10 1093 jos ffp008 Sher G 1990 Ways of branching quantifers PDF Linguistics and Philosophy 13 4 393 422 doi 10 1007 BF00630749 S2CID 61362436 Barwise J 1979 On branching quantifiers in English Journal of Philosophical Logic 8 47 80 doi 10 1007 BF00258419 S2CID 31950692 Hand Michael 1998 Reviewed work On Branching Quantifiers in English Jon Barwise Branching Generalized Quantifiers and Natural Language Generalized Quantifiers Linguistic and Logical Approaches Dag Westerstahl Peter Gardenfors Ways of Branching Quantifiers Gila Sher The Journal of Symbolic Logic 63 4 1611 1614 doi 10 2307 2586678 JSTOR 2586678 S2CID 117833401 External links editGame theoretical quantifier at PlanetMath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Branching quantifier amp oldid 1137788303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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