Search results for "Finite model property"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Modal Consequence Relations Extending S4.3: An Application of Projective Unification

2016

We characterize all finitary consequence relations over $\mathbf{S4.3}$ , both syntactically, by exhibiting so-called (admissible) passive rules that extend the given logic, and semantically, by providing suitable strongly adequate classes of algebras. This is achieved by applying an earlier result stating that a modal logic $L$ extending $\mathbf{S4}$ has projective unification if and only if $L$ contains $\mathbf{S4.3}$ . In particular, we show that these consequence relations enjoy the strong finite model property, and are finitely based. In this way, we extend the known results by Bull and Fine, from logics, to consequence relations. We also show that the lattice of consequence relation…

projective unificationPure mathematicsUnificationLogicFinite model property02 engineering and technology68T15Lattice (discrete subgroup)01 natural sciencesadmissible rulesComputer Science::Logic in Computer Science0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringCountable setFinitaryHeyting algebra08C150101 mathematics03B45MathematicsDiscrete mathematics010102 general mathematicsquasivarietiesModal logicstructural completenessconsequence relations03B35Distributive property06E25$\mathbf{S4.3}$S4.3020201 artificial intelligence & image processingNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic
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Two-Variable First-Order Logic with Equivalence Closure

2012

We consider the satisfiability and finite satisfiability problems for extensions of the two-variable fragment of first-order logic in which an equivalence closure operator can be applied to a fixed number of binary predicates. We show that the satisfiability problem for two-variable, first-order logic with equivalence closure applied to two binary predicates is in 2-NExpTime, and we obtain a matching lower bound by showing that the satisfiability problem for two-variable first-order logic in the presence of two equivalence relations is 2-NExpTime-hard. The logics in question lack the finite model property; however, we show that the same complexity bounds hold for the corresponding finite sa…

Discrete mathematicsGeneral Computer ScienceLogical equivalenceFinite model propertyGeneral MathematicsDescriptive complexity theorySatisfiabilityDecidabilityFirst-order logicCombinatoricsTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESComputer Science::Logic in Computer ScienceMaximum satisfiability problemClosure operatorEquivalence relationBoolean satisfiability problemMathematics2012 27th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science
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On Finite Satisfiability of the Guarded Fragment with Equivalence or Transitive Guards

2007

The guarded fragment of first-order logic, GF, enjoys the finite model property, so the satisfiability and the finite satisfiability problems coincide. We are concerned with two extensions of the two-variable guarded fragment that do not possess the finite model property, namely, GF2 with equivalence and GF2 with transitive guards. We prove that in both cases every finitely satisfiable formula has a model of at most double exponential size w.r.t. its length. To obtain the result we invent a strategy of building finite models that are formed from a number of multidimensional grids placed over a cylindrical surface. The construction yields a 2NEXPTIME-upper bound on the complexity of the fini…

Discrete mathematicsTransitive relationFinite model propertyDouble exponential functionEquivalence (formal languages)AlgorithmSatisfiabilityFinite satisfiabilityMathematics
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The fluted fragment with transitive relations

2022

Abstract The fluted fragment is a fragment of first-order logic (without equality) in which, roughly speaking, the order of quantification of variables coincides with the order in which those variables appear as arguments of predicates. It is known that this fragment has the finite model property. We consider extensions of the fluted fragment with various numbers of transitive relations, as well as the equality predicate. In the presence of one transitive relation (together with equality), the finite model property is lost; nevertheless, we show that the satisfiability and finite satisfiability problems for this extension remain decidable. We also show that the corresponding problems in the…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Logic in Computer ScienceTransitivityTransitive relationLogicFinite model propertyF.4.1; F.2.2DecidabilityExtension (predicate logic)SatisfiabilityLogic in Computer Science (cs.LO)DecidabilityUndecidable problemFluted logicCombinatoricsFragment (logic)03D15F.4.1Order (group theory)F.2.2SatisfiabilityMathematicsAnnals of Pure and Applied Logic
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