LPL Textbook PDF
LPL Textbook PDF
LPL Textbook PDF
CSLI Publications
Center for the Study of Language and Information
Leland Stanford Junior University
First Edition 1999
Second Edition 2011
Printed in the United States
20 19 18 17 16 5e 6 7 8 9
The acid-free paper used in this book meets the minimum requirements of the
American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for
Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Acknowledgements
Our primary debt of gratitude goes to our main collaborators on this project:
Gerry Allwein and Albert Liu. They have worked with us in designing the
entire package, developing and implementing the software, and teaching from
and refining the text. Without their intelligence, dedication, and hard work,
LPL would neither exist nor have most of its other good properties.
In addition to the five of us, many people have contributed directly and in-
directly to the creation of the package. First, over two dozen programmers have
worked on predecessors of the software included with the package, both earlier
versions of Tarskis World and the program Hyperproof, some of whose code
has been incorporated into Fitch. We want especially to mention Christopher
Fuselier, Mark Greaves, Mike Lenz, Eric Ly, and Rick Wong, whose outstand-
ing contributions to the earlier programs provided the foundation of the new
software. Second, we thank several people who have helped with the develop-
ment of the new software in essential ways: Rick Sanders, Rachel Farber, Jon
Russell Barwise, Alex Lau, Brad Dolin, Thomas Robertson, Larry Lemmon,
and Daniel Chai. Their contributions have improved the package in a host of
ways.
Prerelease versions of LPL have been tested at several colleges and univer-
sities. In addition, other colleagues have provided excellent advice that we have
tried to incorporate into the final package. We thank Selmer Bringsjord, Rens-
selaer Polytechnic Institute; Tom Burke, University of South Carolina; Robin
Cooper, Gothenburg University; James Derden, Humboldt State University;
Josh Dever, SUNY Albany; Avrom Faderman, University of Rochester; James
Garson, University of Houston; Christopher Gauker, University of Cincinnati;
Ted Hodgson, Montana State University; John Justice, Randolph-Macon Wom-
ens College; Ralph Kennedy, Wake Forest University; Michael ORourke,
University of Idaho; Greg Ray, University of Florida; Cindy Stern, Califor-
nia State University, Northridge; Richard Tieszen, San Jose State University;
Saul Traiger, Occidental College; and Lyle Zynda, Indiana University at South
Bend. We are particularly grateful to John Justice, Ralph Kennedy, and their
students (as well as the students at Stanford and Indiana University), for
their patience with early versions of the software and for their extensive com-
ments and suggestions. We would also like to thank the many instructors and
students who have oered useful feedback since the initial publication of LPL.
We would also like to thank Stanfords Center for the Study of Language
v
vi / Acknowledgements
and Information and Indiana Universitys College of Arts and Sciences for
their financial support of the project. Finally, we are grateful to our publisher,
Dikran Karagueuzian and his team at CSLI Publications, for their skill and
enthusiasm about LPL, and to Lauri Kanerva for his dedication and skill in
the preparation of the final manuscript.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements for the Second Edition / vii
We have benefitted greatly from the feedback of the many instructors who
have adopted the LPL package in their teaching. We would particularly like
to thank Richard Zach, University of Calgary; S. Marc Cohen, University of
Washington and Bram van Heuveln, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for much
appreciated comments on the package. Bram suggested to us the addition of
the Add Support Steps feature of the new Fitch program. Richard Johns
of the University of British Columbia suggested the new goggles features
which are also included in that program.
The Openproof project continues to benefit from generous funding from
Stanford University and from its home in the intellectually stimulating en-
vironment of Stanfords Center for the Study of Language and Information
(CSLI). As always, we are grateful to our publisher, Dikran Karagueuzian,
and his team at CSLI Publications for their continued enthusiasm for LPL.
Acknowledgements v
Introduction 1
The special role of logic in rational inquiry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Why learn an artificial language? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Consequence and proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Instructions about homework exercises (essential! ) . . . . . . . . . . 5
To the instructor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Web address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
I Propositional Logic
1 Atomic Sentences 19
1.1 Individual constants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.2 Predicate symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
1.3 Atomic sentences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
1.4 General first-order languages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
1.5 Function symbols (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
1.6 The first-order language of set theory (optional ) . . . . . . . . 37
1.7 The first-order language of arithmetic (optional ) . . . . . . . . 38
1.8 Alternative notation (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
ix
x / Contents
7 Conditionals 179
7.1 Material conditional symbol: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
7.2 Biconditional symbol: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
7.3 Conversational implicature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
7.4 Truth-functional completeness (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
7.5 Alternative notation (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Contents
Contents / xi
II Quantifiers
9 Introduction to Quantification 229
9.1 Variables and atomic ws . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230
9.2 The quantifier symbols: , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
9.3 Ws and sentences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
9.4 Semantics for the quantifiers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
9.5 The four Aristotelian forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
9.6 Translating complex noun phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
9.7 Quantifiers and function symbols (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . 253
9.8 Alternative notation (optional ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257
Contents
xii / Contents
Contents
Contents / xiii
Glossary 579
Contents
To Sol Feferman and Pat Suppes,
teachers, colleagues, and friends.
Introduction
1
2 / Introduction
science can be any more certain than its weakest link. If there is something
arbitrary about logic, then the same must hold of all rational inquiry. Thus
laws of logic it becomes crucial to understand just what the laws of logic are, and even
more important, why they are laws of logic. These are the questions that one
takes up when one studies logic itself. To study logic is to use the methods of
rational inquiry on rationality itself.
Since the beginning of the twentieth century the study of logic has un-
dergone rapid and important advances. Spurred on by logical problems in
that most deductive of disciplines, mathematics, it developed into a discipline
in its own right, with its own concepts, methods, techniques, and language.
The Encyclopedia Brittanica lists logic as one of the seven main branches of
knowledge. More recently, the study of logic has played a major role in the
development of modern day computers and programming languages. Logic
continues to play an important part in computer science; indeed, it has been
said that computer science is just logic implemented in electrical engineering.
goals of the book This book is intended to introduce you to some of the most important
concepts and tools of logic. Our goal is to provide detailed and systematic
answers to the questions raised above. We want you to understand just how
the laws of logic follow inevitably from the meanings of the expressions we
use to make claims. Convention is crucial in giving meaning to a language,
but once the meaning is established, the laws of logic follow inevitably.
More particularly, we have two main aims. The first is to help you learn
a new language, the language of first-order logic. The second is to help you
learn about the notion of logical consequence, and about how one goes about
establishing whether some claim is or is not a logical consequence of other
accepted claims. While there is much more to logic than we can even hint at
in this book, or than any one person could learn in a lifetime, we can at least
cover these most basic of issues.
This language of first-order logic is very important. Like Latin, the language is
not spoken, but unlike Latin, it is used every day by mathematicians, philoso-
phers, computer scientists, linguists, and practitioners of artificial intelligence.
Indeed, in some ways it is the universal language, the lingua franca, of the sym-
bolic sciences. Although it is not so frequently used in other forms of rational
inquiry, like medicine and finance, it is also a valuable tool for understanding
the principles of rationality underlying these disciplines as well.
The language goes by various names: the lower predicate calculus, the
FOL functional calculus, the language of first-order logic, and fol. The last of
Introduction
Why learn an artificial language? / 3
these is pronounced efohel, not fall, and is the name we will use.
Certain elements of fol go back to Aristotle, but the language as we know
it today emerged during the twentieth century. The names chiefly associated
with its development are those of Gottlob Frege, Giuseppe Peano, and Charles
Sanders Peirce. In the late nineteenth century, these three logicians indepen-
dently came up with the most important elements of the language, known as
the quantifiers. Since then, there has been a process of standardization and
simplification, resulting in the language in its present form. Even so, there
remain certain dialects of fol, diering mainly in the choice of the particular
symbols used to express the basic notions of the language. We will use the di-
alect most common in mathematics, though we will also tell you about several
other dialects along the way. Fol is used in dierent ways in dierent fields.
In mathematics, it is used in an informal way quite extensively. The various logic and mathematics
connectives and quantifiers find their way into a great deal of mathematical
discourse, both formal and informal, as in a classroom setting. Here you will
often find elements of fol interspersed with English or the mathematicians
native language. If youve ever taken calculus you have probably seen such
formulas as:
> 0 > 0 . . .
Here, the unusual, rotated letters are taken directly from the language fol.
In philosophy, fol and enrichments of it are used in two dierent ways. As logic and philosophy
in mathematics, the notation of fol is used when absolute clarity, rigor, and
lack of ambiguity are essential. But it is also used as a case study of making
informal notions (like grammaticality, meaning, truth, and proof) precise and
rigorous. The applications in linguistics stem from this use, since linguistics
is concerned, in large part, with understanding some of these same informal
notions.
In artificial intelligence, fol is also used in two ways. Some researchers logic and artificial
take advantage of the simple structure of fol sentences to use it as a way to intelligence
encode knowledge to be stored and used by a computer. Thinking is modeled
by manipulations involving sentences of fol. The other use is as a precise
specification language for stating axioms and proving results about artificial
agents.
In computer science, fol has had an even more profound influence. The logic and computer
very idea of an artificial language that is precise yet rich enough to program science
computers was inspired by this language. In addition, all extant programming
languages borrow some notions from one or another dialect of fol. Finally,
there are so-called logic programming languages, like Prolog, whose programs
are sequences of sentences in a certain dialect of fol. We will discuss the
logical basis of Prolog a bit in Part III of this book.
artificial languages Fol serves as the prototypical example of what is known as an artificial
language. These are languages that were designed for special purposes, and
are contrasted with so-called natural languages, languages like English and
Greek that people actually speak. The design of artificial languages within the
symbolic sciences is an important activity, one that is based on the success of
fol and its descendants.
Even if you are not going to pursue logic or any of the symbolic sciences,
the study of fol can be of real benefit. That is why it is so widely taught. For
one thing, learning fol is an easy way to demystify a lot of formal work. It will
also teach you a great deal about your own language, and the laws of logic it
logic and ordinary supports. First, fol, while very simple, incorporates in a clean way some of the
language important features of human languages. This helps make these features much
more transparent. Chief among these is the relationship between language
and the world. But, second, as you learn to translate English sentences into
fol you will also gain an appreciation of the great subtlety that resides in
English, subtlety that cannot be captured in fol or similar languages, at least
not yet. Finally, you will gain an awareness of the enormous ambiguity present
in almost every English sentence, ambiguity which somehow does not prevent
us from understanding each other in most situations.
Earlier, we asked what makes one claim follow from others: convention, or
something else? Giving an answer to this question for fol takes up a signif-
icant part of this book. But a short answer can be given here. Modern logic
logical consequence teaches us that one claim is a logical consequence of another if there is no way
the latter could be true without the former also being true.
This is the notion of logical consequence implicit in all rational inquiry.
All the rational disciplines presuppose that this notion makes sense, and that
we can use it to extract consequences of what we know to be so, or what we
think might be so. It is also used in disconfirming a theory. For if a particular
claim is a logical consequence of a theory, and we discover that the claim
is false, then we know the theory itself must be incorrect in some way or
other. If our physical theory has as a consequence that the planetary orbits
are circular when in fact they are elliptical, then there is something wrong
with our physics. If our economic theory says that inflation is a necessary
consequence of low unemployment, but todays low unemployment has not
caused inflation, then our economic theory needs reassessment.
Rational inquiry, in our sense, is not limited to academic disciplines, and so
neither are the principles of logic. If your beliefs about a close friend logically
Introduction
Essential instructions about homework exercises / 5
imply that he would never spread rumors behind your back, but you find that
he has, then your beliefs need revision. Logical consequence is central, not
only to the sciences, but to virtually every aspect of everyday life.
One of our major concerns in this book is to examine this notion of logical
consequence as it applies specifically to the language fol. But in so doing, we
will also learn a great deal about the relation of logical consequence in natural
languages. Our main concern will be to learn how to recognize when a specific
claim follows logically from others, and conversely, when it does not. This is
an extremely valuable skill, even if you never have occasion to use fol again
after taking this course. Much of our lives are spent trying to convince other
people of things, or being convinced of things by other people, whether the
issue is inflation and unemployment, the kind of car to buy, or how to spend
the evening. The ability to distinguish good reasoning from bad will help you
recognize when your own reasoning could be strengthened, or when that of
others should be rejected, despite superficial plausibility.
It is not always obvious when one claim is a logical consequence of oth-
ers, but powerful methods have been developed to address this problem, at
least for fol. In this book, we will explore methods of proofhow we can proof and
prove that one claim is a logical consequence of anotherand also methods counterexample
for showing that a claim is not a consequence of others. In addition to the
language fol itself, these two methods, the method of proof and the method
of counterexample, form the principal subject matter of this book.
This book came packaged with software that you must have to use the book.
In the software package, you will find a CD-ROM containing four computer
applicationsTarskis World, Fitch, Boole and Submitand a manual that Tarskis World, Fitch,
explains how to use them. If you do not have the complete package, you will Boole and Submit
not be able to do many of the exercises or follow many of the examples used in
the book. The CD-ROM also contains an electronic copy of the book, in case
you prefer reading it on your computer. When you buy the package, you also
get access to the Grade Grinder, an Internet grading service that can check the Grade Grinder
whether your homework is correct.
About half of the exercises in the first two parts of the book will be com-
pleted using the software on the CD-ROM. These exercises typically require
that you create a file or files using Tarskis World, Fitch or Boole, and then
submit these solution files using the program Submit. When you do this, your
solutions are not submitted directly to your instructor, but rather to our grad-
ing server, the Grade Grinder, which assesses your files and sends a report to
both you and your instructor. (If you are not using this book as a part of a
formal class, you can have the reports sent just to you.)
Exercises in the book are numbered n.m, where n is the number of the
chapter and m is the number of the exercise in that chapter. Exercises whose
solutions consist of one or more files created with the LPL applications that
you are to submit to the Grade Grinder are indicated with an arrow (), so
vs. . that you know the solutions are to be sent o into the Internet ether. Exercises
that are not completed using the applications are indicated with a pencil (.).
For example, Exercises 36 and 37 in Chapter 6 might look like this:
6.36 Use Tarskis World to build a world in which the following sentences
are all true. . . .
6.37 Turn in an informal proof that the following argument is logically
. valid. . . .
The arrow on Exercise 6.36 tells you that the world you create using
Tarskis World is to be submitted electronically, and that there is nothing
else to turn in. The pencil on Exercise 6.37 tells you that you do not complete
the exercise using one of the applications. Your instructor will tell you how
to turn in the solution. A solution to this exercise can be submitted as a text
file using Submit, or your instructor might prefer to collect solutions to this
exercise on paper.
Some exercises ask you to turn in something to your instructor in addition
to submitting a file electronically. These are indicated with both an arrow and
a pencil (|.). This is also used when the exercise may require a file to be
submitted, but may not, depending on the solution. For example, the next
problem in Chapter 6 might ask:
6.38 Is the following argument valid? If so, use Fitch to construct a formal
|. proof of its validity. If not, explain why it is invalid and turn in your
explanation to your instructor.
Introduction
Essential instructions about homework exercises / 7
Remember
2. The pencil (.) means that you turn in your solution to your instruc-
tor.
5. Unless otherwise instructed, name your files Proof n.m, World n.m,
Sentences n.m, Table n.m, or Solution n.m, where n.m is the number
of the exercise.
6. When using Fitch to construct Proof n.m, start with the exercise file
Exercise n.m, which contains the problem setup.
7. If you use Submit to submit a text file, the Grade Grinder will not
assess the file, but simply acknowledge that it has been received.
You try it
................................................................
1. Were going to step you through the process of submitting a file to the
Grade Grinder. The file is called World Submit Me 1. It is a Tarskis World
file, but you wont have to open it using Tarskis World in order to sub-
mit it. Well pretend that it is an exercise file that youve created while
doing your homework, and now youre ready to submit it. More complete
instructions on running Submit are contained in the instruction manual
that came with the software.
2. Find the program Submit on the CD-ROM that came with your book. Sub-
mit has an icon that looks like a cog with a capital G on it, and appears
Introduction
Essential instructions about homework exercises / 9
inside a folder called Submit Folder. Once youve found it, double-click on
the icon to launch the program.
3. After a moment, you will see the main Submit window, which has a rotat-
ing cog in the upper-left corner. The first thing you should do is fill in the
requested information in the five fields. Enter your Book ID first, then your
name and email address. You have to use your complete email address
for example, [email protected], not just claire or claire@cssince
the Grade Grinder will need the full address to send its response back to
you. Also, if you have more than one email address, you have to use the
same one every time you submit files, since your email address and Book ID
together are how Grade Grinder will know that it is really you submitting
files. Finally, fill in your instructors name and complete email address. Be
very careful to enter the correct and complete email addresses!
4. Were now ready to specify the file to submit. Click on the button Choose
Files To Submit in the lower-left corner. This opens a window showing
two file lists. The list on the left shows files on your computer, while the one
on the right (which is currently empty) will list files you want to submit.
We need to locate the file World Submit Me 1 on the left and copy it over to
the right. By the way, our software uses files with the extensions.sen, .wld,
.prf, .tt, but we dont mention these in this book when referring to files.
our informal name for the file we are looking for is World Submit Me 1.
The file World Submit Me 1 is located in the Tarskis World exercise files
folder. To find this folder you will have to navigate among folders until it
appears in the file list on the left. Start by clicking once on the Submit
Folder button above the left-hand list. A menu will appear and you can
then move up to higher folders by choosing their names (the higher folders
appear lower on this menu). Move to the next folder up from the Submit
Folder, which should be called LPL Software. When you choose this folder,
the list of files will change. On the new list, find the folder Tarskis World
Folder and double-click on its name to see the contents of the folder. The
list will again change and you should now be able to see the folder TW Exer-
cise Files. Double-click on this folder and the file list will show the contents
of this folder. Toward the bottom of the list (you will have to scroll down
the list by clicking on the scroll buttons), you will find World Submit Me
1. Double-click on this file and its name will move to the list on the right.
5. When you have successfully gotten the file World Submit Me 1 on the right-
hand list, click the Done button underneath the list. This should bring you
back to the original Submit window, only now the file you want to submit
appears in the list of files. (Macintosh users can get to this point quickly by
dragging the files they want to submit onto the Submit icon in the Finder.
This will launch Submit and put those files in the submission list. If you
drag a folder of files, it will put all the files in the folder onto the list.)
6. When you have the correct file on the submission list, click on the Submit
Files button under this list. As this is your very first submission, Submit
requires you to confirm your email address, in addition to asking you to
confirm that you want to submit World Submit Me 1. The confirmation
of your email address will only happen this time. You also have an op-
portunity to saywhether you want to send the results just to you or also
to your instructor. In this case, select Just Me. When you are submit-
ting finished homework exercises, you should select Instructor Too. Once
youve chosen who the results should go to, click the Proceed button and
your submission will be sent. (With real homework, you can always do a
trial submission to see if you got the answers right, asking that the results
be sent just to you. When you are satisfied with your solutions, submit
the files again, asking that the results be sent to the instructor too. But
dont forget the second submission!)
7. In a moment, you will get a dialog box that will tell you if your submission
has been successful. If so, it will give you a receipt message that you can
save, if you like. If you do not get this receipt, then your submission has
not gone through and you will have to try again.
8. A few minutes after the Grade Grinder receives your file, you should get
an email message saying that it has been received. If this were a real home-
work exercise, it would also tell you if the Grade Grinder found any errors
in your homework solutions. You wont get an email report if you put in
the wrong, or a misspelled, email address. If you dont get a report, try
submitting again with the right address.
9. Quit from Submit when you are done. Congratulations on submitting your
first file.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Heres an important thing for you to know: when you submit files to the
what gets sent Grade Grinder, Submit sends a copy of the files. The original files are still
on the disk where you originally saved them. If you saved them on a public
computer, it is best not to leave them lying around. Put them on a thumb drive
that you can take with you, and delete any copies from the public computers
hard disk.
Introduction
To the instructor / 11
You should carefully read the email that you receive from the Grade
Grinder since it contains information concerning the errors that the Grade
Grinder found in your work. Even if there are no errors, you should keep the
email that you receive as a reminder that you have submitted the work. In
addition, if you log in at our web site, http://www.gradegrinder.net/, you
will be able to see the complete history of your submissions to the Grade
Grinder.
To the instructor
Students, you may skip this section. It is a personal note from us, the authors,
to instructors planning to use this package in their logic courses.
Practical matters
We use the Language, Proof and Logic package (LPL) in two very dierent
sorts of courses. One is a first course in logic for undergraduates with no
previous background in logic, philosophy, mathematics, or computer science.
This important course, sometimes disparagingly referred to as baby logic,
is often an undergraduates first and only exposure to the rigorous study of
reasoning. When we teach this course, we cover much of the first two parts
of the book, leaving out many of the sections indicated as optional in the
table of contents. Although some of the material in these two parts may seem
more advanced than is usually covered in a traditional introductory course,
we find that the software makes it completely accessible to even the relatively
unprepared student.
At the other end of the spectrum, we use LPL in an introductory graduate-
level course in metatheory, designed for students who have already had some
exposure to logic. In this course, we quickly move through the first two parts,
thereby giving the students both a review and a common framework for use
in the discussions of soundness and completeness. Using the Grade Grinder,
students can progress through much of the early material at their own pace,
doing only as many exercises as is needed to demonstrate competence.
There are no doubt many other courses for which the package would be
suitable. Though we have not had the opportunity to use it this way, it would
be ideally suited for a two-term course in logic and its metatheory.
Our courses are typically listed as philosophy courses, though many of the
students come from other majors. Since LPL is designed to satisfy the logical
needs of students from a wide variety of disciplines, it fits naturally into logic
courses taught in other departments, most typically mathematics and com-
To the instructor
12 / Introduction
Introduction
To the instructor / 13
innovative feature of this package. Most important, the Grade Grinder will
free you from the most tedious aspect of teaching logic, namely, grading those
kinds of problems whose assessment can be mechanized. These include formal
proofs, translation into fol, truth tables, and various other kinds of exercises.
This will allow you to spend more time on the more rewarding parts of teaching
the material.
That said, it is important to emphasize two points. The first is that the
Grade Grinder is not limited in the way that most computerized grading
programs are. It uses sophisticated techniques, including a powerful first-order
theorem prover, in assessing student answers and providing intelligent reports
on those answers. Second, in designing this package, we have not fallen into
the trap of tailoring the material to what can be mechanically assessed. We
firmly believe that computer-assisted learning has an important but limited
role to play in logic instruction. Much of what we teach goes beyond what
can be assessed automatically. This is why about half of the exercises in the
book still require human attention.
It is a bit misleading to say that the Grade Grinder grades the home-
work. The Grade Grinder simply reports to you any errors in the students
solutions, leaving the decision to you what weight to give to individual prob-
lems and whether partial credit is appropriate for certain mistakes. A more
detailed explanation of what the Grade Grinder does and what grade reports
look like can be found at the web address given on page 16.
Before your students can request that their Grade Grinder results be sent
to you, you will have to register with the Grade Grinder as an instructor. This registering with
can be done by going to the LPL web site and following the Instructor links. the Grade Grinder
Philosophical remarks
This book, and the supporting software that comes with it, grew out of our
own dissatisfaction with beginning logic courses. It seems to us that students
all too often come away from these courses with neither of the things we
want them to have. They do not understand the first-order language or the
rationale for it, and they are unable to explain why or even whether one claim
follows logically from another. Worse, they often come away with a complete
misconception about logic. They leave their first (and only) course in logic
having learned what seem like a bunch of useless formal rules. They gain little
if any understanding about why those rules, rather than some others, were
chosen, and they are unable to take any of what they have learned and apply
it in other fields of rational inquiry or in their daily lives. Indeed, many come
away convinced that logic is both arbitrary and irrelevant. Nothing could be
To the instructor
14 / Introduction
Introduction
To the instructor / 15
To the instructor
16 / Introduction
Web address
In addition to the book, software, and grading service, additional material can
be found on the Web at the following address:
http://www.gradegrinder.net
At the web site you will find hints and solutions to selected exercises, an
online version of the software manuals, support pages where you can browse
our list of frequently asked questions, and directly request technical support
and submit bug reports. In addition registered users may log in at the site.
Students can view their history of submissions to the Grade Grinder, and
download the latest versions of the software, while instructors can view the
history of submissions by all of their students. You are automatically registered
as a student user of the package when you make your first submission to the
Grade Grinder (do it now, if you havent already done so.)
Introduction
Part I
Propositional Logic
Chapter 1
Atomic Sentences
In the Introduction, we talked about fol as though it were a single language.
Actually, it is more like a family of languages, all having a similar grammar
and sharing certain important vocabulary items, known as the connectives
and quantifiers. Languages in this family can dier, however, in the specific
vocabulary used to form their most basic sentences, the so-called atomic sen-
tences.
Atomic sentences correspond to the most simple sentences of English, sen- atomic sentences
tences consisting of some names connected by a predicate. Examples are Max
ran, Max saw Claire, and Claire gave Scruy to Max. Similarly, in fol atomic
sentences are formed by combining names (or individual constants, as they
are often called) and predicates, though the way they are combined is a bit
dierent from English, as you will see.
Dierent versions of fol have available dierent names and predicates. We names and predicates
will frequently use a first-order language designed to describe blocks arranged
on a chessboard, arrangements that you will be able to create in the program
Tarskis World. This language has names like b, e, and n2 , and predicates
like Cube, Larger, and Between. Some examples of atomic sentences in this
language are Cube(b), Larger(c, f), and Between(b, c, d). These sentences say,
respectively, that b is a cube, that c is larger than f , and that b is between c
and d.
Later in this chapter, we will look at the atomic sentences used in two
other versions of fol, the first-order languages of set theory and arithmetic.
In the next chapter, we begin our discussion of the connectives and quantifiers
common to all first-order languages.
Section 1.1
Individual constants
Individual constants are simply symbols that are used to refer to some fixed
individual object. They are the fol analogue of names, though in fol we
generally dont capitalize them. For example, we might use max as an individ-
ual constant to denote a particular person, named Max, or 1 as an individual
constant to denote a particular number, the number one. In either case, they
would basically work exactly the way names work in English. Our blocks
19
20 / Atomic Sentences
Remember
In fol,
Section 1.2
Predicate symbols
Predicate symbols are symbols used to express some property of objects or
predicate or relation some relation between objects. Because of this, they are also sometimes called
symbols relation symbols. As in English, predicates are expressions that, when com-
bined with names, form atomic sentences. But they dont correspond exactly
to the predicates of English grammar.
Consider the English sentence Max likes Claire. In English grammar, this
is analyzed as a subject-predicate sentence. It consists of the subject Max
followed by the predicate likes Claire. In fol, by contrast, we usually view
logical subjects this as a claim involving two logical subjects, the names Max and Claire, and
1 There is, however, a variant of first-order logic called free logic in which this assumption
is relaxed. In free logic, there can be individual constants without referents. This yields a
language more appropriate for mythology and fiction.
Chapter 1
Predicate symbols / 21
a predicate, likes, that expresses a relation between the referents of the names.
Thus, atomic sentences of fol often have two or more logical subjects, and the
predicate is, so to speak, whatever is left. The logical subjects are called the
arguments of the predicate. In this case, the predicate is said to be binary, arguments of a
since it takes two arguments. predicate
In English, some predicates have optional arguments. Thus you can say
Claire gave, Claire gave Scruy, or Claire gave Scruy to Max. Here the
predicate gave is taking one, two, and three arguments, respectively. But in
fol, each predicate has a fixed number of arguments, a fixed arity as it is arity of a predicate
called. This is a number that tells you how many individual constants the
predicate symbol needs in order to form a sentence. The term arity comes
from the fact that predicates taking one argument are called unary, those
taking two are binary, those taking three are ternary, and so forth.
If the arity of a predicate symbol Pred is 1, then Pred will be used to
express some property of objects, and so will require exactly one argument (a
name) to make a claim. For example, we might use the unary predicate symbol
Home to express the property of being at home. We could then combine this
with the name max to get the expression Home(max), which expresses the
claim that Max is at home.
If the arity of Pred is 2, then Pred will be used to represent a relation
between two objects. Thus, we might use the expression Taller(claire, max) to
express a claim about Max and Claire, the claim that Claire is taller than
Max. In fol, we can have predicate symbols of any arity. However, in the
blocks language used in Tarskis World we restrict ourselves to predicates
with arities 1, 2, and 3. Here we list the predicates of that language, this time
with their arity.
Arity 3: Between
Section 1.2
22 / Atomic Sentences
Atomic
Sentence Interpretation
Tet(a) a is a tetrahedron
Cube(a) a is a cube
Dodec(a) a is a dodecahedron
Small(a) a is small
Medium(a) a is medium
Large(a) a is large
SameSize(a, b) a is the same size as b
SameShape(a, b) a is the same shape as b
Larger(a, b) a is larger than b
Smaller(a, b) a is smaller than b
SameCol(a, b) a is in the same column as b
SameRow(a, b) a is in the same row as b
a and b are located on adjacent (but
Adjoins(a, b)
not diagonally) squares
a is located nearer to the left edge of
LeftOf(a, b)
the grid than b
a is located nearer to the right edge
RightOf(a, b)
of the grid than b
a is located nearer to the front of the
FrontOf(a, b)
grid than b
a is located nearer to the back of the
BackOf(a, b)
grid than b
a, b and c are in the same row, col-
Between(a, b, c) umn, or diagonal, and a is between b
and c
an individual has the property in question or not. For example, Claire, who
is sixteen, is young. She will not be young when she is 96. But there is no
determinate age at which a person stops being young: it is a gradual sort of
thing. Fol, however, assumes that every predicate is interpreted by a deter-
determinate property minate property or relation. By a determinate property, we mean a property
for which, given any object, there is a definite fact of the matter whether or
not the object has the property.
This is one of the reasons we say that the blocks language predicates are
Chapter 1
Atomic sentences / 23
Remember
In fol,
Section 1.3
Atomic sentences
In fol, the simplest kinds of claims are those made with a single predicate
and the appropriate number of individual constants. A sentence formed by a
predicate followed by the right number of names is called an atomic sentence. atomic sentence
For example Taller(claire, max) and Cube(a) are atomic sentences, provided
the names and predicate symbols in question are part of the vocabulary of
our language. In the case of the identity symbol, we put the two required
names on either side of the predicate, as in a = b. This is called infix no- infix vs. prefix notation
tation, since the predicate symbol = appears in between its two arguments.
With the other predicates we use prefix notation: the predicate precedes
the arguments.
The order of the names in an atomic sentence is quite important. Just
as Claire is taller than Max means something dierent from Max is taller
than Claire, so too Taller(claire, max) means something completely dierent
than Taller(max, claire). We have set things up in our blocks language so that
the order of the arguments of the predicates is like that in English. Thus
LeftOf(b, c) means more or less the same thing as the English sentence b is
left of c, and Between(b, c, d) means roughly the same as the English b is
between c and d.
Predicates and names designate properties and objects, respectively. What
Section 1.3
24 / Atomic Sentences
claims makes sentences special is that they make claims (or express propositions).
A claim is something that is either true or false; which of these it is we call
truth value its truth value. Thus Taller(claire, max) expresses a claim whose truth value is
true, while Taller(max, claire) expresses a claim whose truth value is false.
(You probably didnt know that, but now you do.) Given our assumption
that predicates express determinate properties and that names denote definite
individuals, it follows that each atomic sentence of fol must express a claim
that is either true or false.
You try it
................................................................
1. It is time to try your hand using Tarskis World. In this exercise, you
will use Tarskis World to become familiar with the interpretations of the
atomic sentences of the blocks language. Before starting, though, you need
to learn how to launch Tarskis World and perform some basic operations.
Read the appropriate sections of the users manual describing Tarskis
World before going on.
2. Launch Tarskis World and open the files called Wittgensteins World and
Wittgensteins Sentences. You will find these in the folder TW Exercises. In
these files, you will see a blocks world and a list of atomic sentences. (We
have added comments to some of the sentences. Comments are prefaced
by a semicolon (;), which tells Tarskis World to ignore the rest of the
line.)
3. Move through the sentences using the arrow keys on your keyboard, men-
tally assessing the truth value of each sentence in the given world. Use the
Verify Sentence button to check your assessments. This button is on the
left of the group of three colored buttons on the toolbar (the one which
has T/F written on it). (Since the sentences are all atomic sentences the
Game button, on the right of the same group, will not be helpful.) If
you are surprised by any of the evaluations, try to figure out how your
interpretation of the predicate diers from the correct interpretation.
4. Next change Wittgensteins World in many dierent ways, seeing what hap-
pens to the truth of the various sentences. The main point of this is to
help you figure out how Tarskis World interprets the various predicates.
For example, what does BackOf(d, c) mean? Do two things have to be in
the same column for one to be in back of the other?
5. Play around as much as you need until you are sure you understand the
meanings of the atomic sentences in this file. For example, in the original
Chapter 1
Atomic sentences / 25
world none of the sentences using Adjoins comes out true. You should try
to modify the world to make some of them true. As you do this, you will
notice that large blocks cannot adjoin other blocks.
6. In doing this exercise, you will no doubt notice that Between does not mean
exactly what the English between means. This is due to the necessity of
interpreting Between as a determinate predicate. For simplicity, we insist
that in order for b to be between c and d, all three must be in the same
row, column, or diagonal.
7. When you are finished, close the files, but do not save the changes you
have made to them.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Remember
In fol,
Atomic sentences are built from the identity predicate, =, using infix
notation: the arguments are placed on either side of the predicate.
Exercises
You will eventually want to read the entire chapter of the users manual on how to use Tarskis World. To
do the following problems, you will need to read at least the first four sections. Also, if you dont remember
how to name and submit your solution files, you should review the section on essential instructions in
the Introduction, starting on page 5.
1.1 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. This is an easy but crucial
exercise that will familiarize you with the atomic sentences of the blocks language. There is
nothing you need to turn in or submit, but dont skip the exercise!
1.2 (Copying some atomic sentences) This exercise will give you some practice with the Tarskis
World keyboard window, as well as with the syntax of atomic sentences. The following are all
atomic sentences of our language. Start a new sentence file and copy them into it. Have Tarskis
World check each formula after you write it to see that it is a sentence. If you make a mistake,
edit it before going on. Make sure you use the Add Sentence command between sentences,
Section 1.3
26 / Atomic Sentences
not the return key. If youve done this correctly, the sentences in your list will be numbered
and separated by horizontal lines.
1. Tet(a)
2. Medium(a)
3. Dodec(b)
4. Cube(c)
5. FrontOf(a, b)
6. Between(a, b, c)
7. a = d
8. Larger(a, b)
9. Smaller(a, c)
10. LeftOf(b, c)
Remember, you should save these sentences in a file named Sentences 1.2. When youve finished
your first assignment, submit all of your solution files using the Submit program.
1.3 (Building a world) Build a world in which all the sentences in Exercise 1.2 are simultaneously
true. Remember to name and submit your world file as World 1.3.
1.4 (Translating atomic sentences) Here are some simple sentences of English. Start a new sentence
file and translate them into fol.
1. a is a cube.
2. b is smaller than a.
3. c is between a and d.
4. d is large.
5. e is larger than a.
6. b is a tetrahedron.
7. e is a dodecahedron.
8. e is right of b.
9. a is smaller than e.
10. d is in back of a.
11. b is in the same row as d.
12. b is the same size as c.
After youve translated the sentences, build a world in which all of your translations are true.
Submit your sentence and world files as Sentences 1.4 and World 1.4.
1.5 (Naming objects) Open Lestrades Sentences and Lestrades World. You will notice that none of
the objects in this world has a name. Your task is to assign the objects names in such a way
that all the sentences in the list come out true. Remember to save your solution in a file named
World 1.5. Be sure to use Save World As. . . , not Save World.
Chapter 1
Atomic sentences / 27
1.6 (Naming objects, continued) Not all of the choices in Exercise 1.5 were forced on you. That
is, you could have assigned the names dierently and still had the sentences come out true.
Change the assignment of as many names as possible while still making all the sentences true,
and submit the changed world as World 1.6. In order for us to compare your files, you must
submit both World 1.5 and World 1.6 at the same time.
1.7 (Context sensitivity of predicates) We have stressed the fact that fol assumes that every
|. predicate is interpreted by a determinate relation, whereas this is not the case in natural
languages like English. Indeed, even when things seem quite determinate, there is often some
form of context sensitivity. In fact, we have built some of this into Tarskis World. Consider,
for example, the dierence between the predicates Larger and BackOf. Whether or not cube a is
larger than cube b is a determinate matter, and also one that does not vary depending on your
perspective on the world. Whether or not a is back of b is also determinate, but in this case it
does depend on your perspective. If you rotate the world by 90 , the answer might change.
Open Austins Sentences and Wittgensteins World. Evaluate the sentences in this file and
tabulate the resulting truth values in a table like the one below. Weve already filled in the first
column, showing the values in the original world. Rotate the world 90 clockwise and evaluate
the sentences again, adding the results to the table. Repeat until the world has come full circle.
Original Rotated 90 Rotated 180 Rotated 270
1. false
2. false
3. true
4. false
5. true
6. false
You should be able to think of an atomic sentence in the blocks language that would produce
a row across the table with the following pattern:
Add a seventh sentence to Austins Sentences that would display the above pattern.
Are there any atomic sentences in the language that would produce a row with this pattern?
If so, add such a sentence as sentence eight in Austins Sentences. If not, leave sentence eight
blank.
Are there any atomic sentences that would produce a row in the table containing exactly
three trues? If so, add such a sentence as number nine. If not, leave sentence nine blank.
Submit your modified sentence file as Sentences 1.7. Turn in your completed table to your
instructor.
Section 1.3
28 / Atomic Sentences
Section 1.4
General first-order languages
First-order languages dier in the names and predicates they contain, and so in
the atomic sentences that can be formed. What they share are the connectives
and quantifiers that enable us to build more complex sentences from these
simpler parts. We will get to those common elements in later chapters.
translation When you translate a sentence of English into fol, you will sometimes
have a predefined first-order language that you want to use, like the blocks
language of Tarskis World, or the language of set theory or arithmetic de-
scribed later in this chapter. If so, your goal is to come up with a translation
that captures the meaning of the original English sentence as nearly as pos-
sible, given the names and predicates available in your predefined first-order
language.
Other times, though, you will not have a predefined language to use for
your translation. If not, the first thing you have to do is decide what names and
designing languages predicates you need for your translation. In eect, you are designing, on the fly,
a new first-order language capable of expressing the English sentence you want
to translate. Weve been doing this all along, for example when we introduced
Home(max) as the translation of Max is at home and Taller(claire, max) as the
translation of Claire is taller than Max.
When you make these decisions, there are often alternative ways to go.
For example, suppose you were asked to translate the sentence Claire gave
Scruy to Max. You might introduce a binary predicate GaveScruy(x, y),
meaning x gave Scruy to y, and then translate the original sentence as
GaveScruy(claire, max). Alternatively, you might introduce a three-place pred-
icate Gave(x, y, z), meaning x gave y to z, and then translate the sentence as
Gave(claire, scruy, max).
There is nothing wrong with either of these predicates, or their resulting
translations, so long as you have clearly specified what the predicates mean.
Of course, they may not be equally useful when you go on to translate other
choosing predicates sentences. The first predicate will allow you to translate sentences like Max
gave Scruy to Evan and Evan gave Scruy to Miles. But if you then run into
the sentence Max gave Carl to Claire, you would be stuck, and would have
to introduce an entirely new predicate, say, GaveCarl(x, y). The three-place
predicate is thus more flexible. A first-order language that contained it (plus
the relevant names) would be able to translate any of these sentences.
In general, when designing a first-order language we try to economize on
the predicates by introducing more flexible ones, like Gave(x, y, z), rather than
Chapter 1
General first-order languages / 29
less flexible ones, like GaveScruy(x, y) and GaveCarl(x, y). This produces a
more expressive language, and one that makes the logical relations between
various claims more perspicuous.
Names can be introduced into a first-order language to refer to anything
that can be considered an object. But we construe the notion of an object objects
pretty flexiblyto cover anything that we can make claims about. Weve al-
ready seen languages with names for people and the blocks of Tarskis World.
Later in the chapter, well introduce languages with names for sets and num-
bers. Sometimes we will want to have names for still other kinds of objects,
like days or times. Suppose, for example, that we want to translate the sen-
tences:
Designing a first-order language with just the right names and predicates
requires some skill. Usually, the overall goal is to come up with a language
that can say everything you want, but that uses the smallest vocabulary
possible. Picking the right names and predicates is the key to doing this.
Exercises
1.8 Suppose we have two first-order languages: the first contains the binary predicates
. GaveScruy(x, y) and GaveCarl(x, y), and the names max and claire; the second contains the
ternary predicate Gave(x, y, z) and the names max, claire, scruy, and carl.
1. List all of the atomic sentences that can be expressed in the first language. (Some of
these may say weird things like GaveScruy(claire, claire), but dont worry about that.)
2. How many atomic sentences can be expressed in the second language? (Count all of
them, including odd ones like Gave(scruy, scruy, scruy).)
3. How many names and binary predicates would a language like the first need in order
to say everything you can say in the second?
Section 1.4
30 / Atomic Sentences
Names:
Max max
Claire claire
Folly folly The name of a certain dog.
Carl carl The name of another dog.
Scruy scruy The name of a certain cat.
Pris pris The name of another cat.
2 pm, Jan 2, 2011 2:00 The name of a time.
2:01 pm, Jan 2, 2011 2:01 One minute later.
.. ..
. . Similarly for other times.
Predicates:
x is a pet Pet(x)
x is a person Person(x)
x is a student Student(x)
x is at home Home(x)
x is happy Happy(x)
t is earlier than t t < t Earlier-than for times.
x was hungry at time t Hungry(x, t)
x was angry at time t Angry(x, t)
x owned y at time t Owned(x, y, t)
x gave y to z at t Gave(x, y, z, t)
x fed y at time t Fed(x, y, t)
1.9 We will be giving a number of problems that use the symbols explained in Table 1.2. Start a
new sentence file in Tarskis World and translate the following into fol, using the names and
predicates listed in the table. (You can switch to the Pets language in the Sentence toolbar.
When you type, make sure they appear exactly as in the table; for example, use 2:00, not 2:00
pm or 2 pm.) All references to times are assumed to be to times on January 2, 2011.
1. Claire owned Folly at 2 pm.
2. Claire gave Pris to Max at 2:05 pm.
3. Max is a student.
4. Claire fed Carl at 2 pm.
5. Folly belonged to Max at 3:05 pm.
6. 2:00 pm is earlier than 2:05 pm.
Chapter 1
Function symbols / 31
1.10 Translate the following into natural sounding, colloquial English, consulting Table 1.2.
. 1. Owned(max, scruy, 2:00)
2. Fed(max, scruy, 2:30)
3. Gave(max, scruy, claire, 3:00)
4. 2:00 < 2:00
1.11 For each sentence in the following list, suggest a translation into an atomic sentence of fol. In
. addition to giving the translation, explain what kinds of objects your names refer to and the
intended meaning of the predicate you use.
1. Max shook hands with Claire.
2. Max shook hands with Claire yesterday.
3. AIDS is less contagious than influenza.
4. Spain is between France and Portugal in size.
5. Misery loves company.
Section 1.5
Function symbols
Some first-order languages have, in addition to names and predicates, other
expressions that can appear in atomic sentences. These expressions are called
function symbols. Function symbols allow us to form name-like terms from function symbols
names and other name-like terms. They allow us to express, using atomic
sentences, complex claims that could not be perspicuously expressed using
just names and predicates. Some English examples will help clarify this.
English has many sorts of noun phrases, expressions that can be combined
with a verb phrase to get a sentence. Besides names like Max and Claire,
other noun phrases include expressions like Maxs father, Claires mother,
Every girl who knows Max, No boy who knows Claire, Someone and so forth.
Each of these combines with a singular verb phrase such as likes unbuttered
popcorn to make a sentence. But notice that the sentences that result have
very dierent logical properties. For example,
Claires mother likes unbuttered popcorn
implies that someone likes unbuttered popcorn, while
No boy who knows Claire likes unbuttered popcorn
does not.
Since these noun phrases have such dierent logical properties, they are terms
treated dierently in fol. Those that intuitively refer to an individual are
Section 1.5
32 / Atomic Sentences
called terms, and behave like the individual constants we have already dis-
cussed. In fact, individual constants are the simplest terms, and more complex
terms are built from them using function symbols. Noun phrases like No boy
who knows Claire are handled with very dierent devices, known as quanti-
fiers, which we will discuss later.
The fol analog of the noun phrase Maxs father is the term father(max).
It is formed by putting a function symbol, father, in front of the individual
complex terms constant max. The result is a complex term that we use to refer to the father
of the person referred to by the name max. Similarly, we can put the function
symbol mother together with the name claire and get the term mother(claire),
which functions pretty much like the English term Claires mother.
We can repeat this construction as many times as we like, forming more
and more complex terms:
father(father(max))
mother(father(claire))
mother(mother(mother(claire)))
The first of these refers to Maxs paternal grandfather, the second to Claires
paternal grandmother, and so forth.
These function symbols are called unary function symbols, because, like
unary predicates, they take one argument. The resulting terms function just
like names, and can be used in forming atomic sentences. For instance, the
fol sentence
Taller(father(max), max)
says that Maxs father is taller than Max. Thus, in a language containing
function symbols, the definition of atomic sentence needs to be modified to
allow complex terms to appear in the argument positions in addition to names.
function symbols vs. Students often confuse function symbols with predicates, because both
predicates take terms as arguments. But there is a big dierence. When you combine a
unary function symbol with a term you do not get a sentence, but another
term: something that refers (or should refer) to an object of some sort. This is
why function symbols can be reapplied over and over again. As we have seen,
the following makes perfectly good sense:
father(father(max))
This, on the other hand, is total nonsense:
Dodec(Dodec(a))
To help prevent this confusion, we will always capitalize predicates of fol and
leave function symbols and names in lower case.
Chapter 1
Function symbols / 33
Besides unary function symbols, fol allows function symbols of any ar-
ity. Thus, for example, we can have binary function symbols. Simple English arity of function
counterparts of binary function symbols are hard to come up with, but they symbols
are quite common in mathematics. For instance, we might have a function
symbol sum that combines with two terms, t1 and t2 , to give a new term,
sum(t1 , t2 ), which refers to the sum of the numbers referred to by t1 and t2 .
Then the complex term sum(3, 5) would give us another way of referring to
8. In a later section, we will introduce a function symbol to denote addition,
but we will use infix notation, rather than prefix notation. Thus 3 + 5 will be
used instead of sum(3, 5).
In fol, just as we assume that every name refers to an actual object,
we also assume that every complex term refers to exactly one object. This
is a somewhat artificial assumption, since many function-like expressions in
English dont always work this way. Though we may assume that
mother(father(father(max)))
refers to an actual (deceased) individualone of Maxs great-grandmothers
there may be other uses of these function symbols that dont seem to give
us genuinely referring expressions. For example, perhaps the complex terms
mother(adam) and mother(eve) fail to refer to any individuals, if Adam and Eve
were in fact the first people. And certainly the complex term mother(3) doesnt
refer to anything, since the number three has no mother. When designing a
first-order language with function symbols, you should try to ensure that your
complex terms always refer to unique, existing individuals.
The blocks world language as it is implemented in Tarskis World does not functions symbols for
contain function symbols, but we could easily extend the language to include blocks language
some. Suppose for example we introduced the function expressions fm, bm, lm
and rm, that allowed us to form complex terms like:
fm(a)
lm(bm(c))
rm(rm(fm(d)))
We could interpret these function symbols so that, for example, fm(a) refers
to the frontmost block in the same column as a. Thus, if there are several
blocks in the column with a, then fm(a) refers to whichever one is nearest the
front. (Notice that fm(a) may not itself have a name; fm(a) may be our only
way to refer to it.) If a is the only block in the column, or is the frontmost in
its column, then fm(a) would refer to a. Analogously, bm, lm and rm could be
interpreted to mean backmost, leftmost and rightmost, respectively.
With this interpretation, the term lm(bm(c)) would refer to the leftmost
block in the same row as the backmost block in the same column as c. The
Section 1.5
34 / Atomic Sentences
Remember
Complex terms are used just like names (simple terms) in forming
atomic sentences.
In fol, complex terms are assumed to refer to one and only one object.
Exercises
1.12 Express in English the claims made by the following sentences of fol as clearly as you can.
. You should try to make your English sentences as natural as possible. All the sentences are,
by the way, true.
1. Taller(father(claire), father(max))
2. john = father(max)
3. Taller(claire, mother(mother(claire)))
4. Taller(mother(mother(max)), mother(father(max)))
5. mother(melanie) = mother(claire)
1.13 Assume that we have expanded the blocks language to include the function symbols fm, bm, lm
. and rm described earlier. Then the following formulas would all be sentences of the language:
1. Tet(lm(e))
2. fm(c) = c
3. bm(b) = bm(e)
4. FrontOf(fm(e), e)
5. LeftOf(fm(b), b)
Chapter 1
Function symbols / 35
6. SameRow(rm(c), c)
7. bm(lm(c)) = lm(bm(c))
8. SameShape(lm(b), bm(rm(e)))
9. d = lm(fm(rm(bm(d))))
10. Between(b, lm(b), rm(b))
Fill in the following table with trues and falses according to whether the indicated sentence
is true or false in the indicated world. Since Tarskis World does not understand the function
symbols, you will not be able to check your answers. We have filled in a few of the entries for
you. Turn in the completed table to your instructor.
1.14 As you probably noticed in doing Exercise 1.13, three of the sentences came out true in all
four worlds. It turns out that one of these three cannot be falsified in any world, because of
the meanings of the predicates and function symbols it contains. Your goal in this problem is
to build a world in which all of the other sentences in Exercise 1.13 come out false. When you
have found such a world, submit it as World 1.14.
1.15 Suppose we have two first-order languages for talking about fathers. The first, which well
. call the functional language, contains the names claire, melanie, and jon, the function symbol
father, and the predicates = and Taller. The second language, which we will call the relational
language, has the same names, no function symbols, and the binary predicates =, Taller, and
FatherOf, where FatherOf(c, b) means that c is the father of b. Translate the following atomic
sentences from the relational language into the functional language. Be careful. Some atomic
sentences, such as claire = claire, are in both languages! Such a sentence counts as a translation
of itself.
1. FatherOf(jon, claire)
2. FatherOf(jon, melanie)
Section 1.5
36 / Atomic Sentences
3. Taller(claire, melanie)
Which of the following atomic sentences of the functional language can be translated into atomic
sentences of the relational language? Translate those that can be and explain the problem with
those that cant.
4. father(melanie) = jon
5. father(melanie) = father(claire)
6. Taller(father(claire), father(jon))
When we add connectives and quantifiers to the language, we will be able to translate freely
back and forth between the functional and relational languages.
1.16 Lets suppose that everyone has a favorite movie star. Given this assumption, make up a first-
. order language for talking about people and their favorite movie stars. Use a function symbol
that allows you to refer to an individuals favorite actor, plus a relation symbol that allows
you to say that one person is a better actor than another. Explain the interpretation of your
function and relation symbols, and then use your language to express the following claims:
1. Harrison is Nancys favorite actor.
2. Nancys favorite actor is better than Sean.
3. Nancys favorite actor is better than Maxs.
4. Claires favorite actors favorite actor is Brad.
5. Sean is his own favorite actor.
1.17 Make up a first-order language for talking about people and their relative heights. Instead of
. using relation symbols like Taller, however, use a function symbol that allows you to refer to
peoples heights, plus the relation symbols = and <. Explain the interpretation of your function
symbol, and then use your language to express the following two claims:
1. George is taller than Sam.
2. Sam and Mary are the same height.
Do you see any problem with this function symbol? If so, explain the problem. [Hint: What
happens if you apply the function symbol twice?]
1.18 For each sentence in the following list, suggest a translation into an atomic sentence of fol. In
. addition to giving the translation, explain what kinds of objects your names refer to and the
intended meaning of the predicates and function symbols you use.
1. Indianas capital is larger than Californias.
2. Hitlers mistress died in 1945.
3. Max shook Claires fathers hand.
4. Max is his fathers son.
5. John and Nancys eldest child is younger than Jon and Mary Ellens.
Chapter 1
The first-order language of set theory / 37
Section 1.6
The first-order language of set theory
Fol was initially developed for use in mathematics, and consequently the
most familiar first-order languages are those associated with various branches
of mathematics. One of the most common of these is the language of set
theory. This language has only two predicates, both binary. The first is the predicates of set theory
identity symbol, =, which we have already encountered, and the second is the
symbol , for set membership.
It is standard to use infix notation for both of these predicates. Thus, in
set theory, atomic sentences are always formed by placing individual constants
on either side of one of the two predicates. This allows us to make identity
claims, of the form a = b, and membership claims, of the form a b (where
a and b are individual constants).
A sentence of the form a b is true if and only if the thing named by b is membership ()
a set, and the thing named by a is a member of that set. For example, suppose
a names the number 2 and b names the set {2, 4, 6}. Then the following table
tells us which membership claims made up using these names are true and
which are false.2
a a false
a b true
b a false
b b false
Notice that there is one striking dierence between the atomic sentences
of set theory and the atomic sentences of the blocks language. In the blocks
language, you can have a sentence, like LeftOf(a, b), that is true in a world,
but which can be made false simply by moving one of the objects. Moving
an object does not change the way the name works, but it can turn a true
sentence into a false one, just as the sentence Claire is sitting down can go
from true to false in virtue of Claires standing up.
In set theory, we wont find this sort of thing happening. Here, the analog
of a world is just a domain of objects and sets. For example, our domain
might consist of all natural numbers, sets of natural numbers, sets of sets of
natural numbers, and so forth. The dierence between these worlds and
those of Tarskis World is that the truth or falsity of the atomic sentences is
determined entirely once the reference of the names is fixed. There is nothing
that corresponds to moving the blocks around. Thus if the universe contains
2 Forthe purposes of this discussion we are assuming that numbers are not sets, and that
sets can contain either numbers or other sets as members.
Section 1.6
38 / Atomic Sentences
the objects 2 and {2, 4, 6}, and if the names a and b are assigned to them,
then the atomic sentences must get the values indicated in the previous table.
The only way those values can change is if the names name dierent things.
Identity claims also work this way, both in set theory and in Tarskis World.
Exercises
1.19 Which of the following atomic sentences in the first-order language of set theory are true
and which are false? We use, in addition to a and b as above, the name c for 6 and d for
{2, 7, {2, 4, 6}}.
1. a c
2. a d
3. b c
4. b d
5. c d
6. c b
To answer this exercise, submit a Tarskis World sentence file with an uppercase T or F in each
sentence slot to indicate your assessment.
Section 1.7
The first-order language of arithmetic
While neither the blocks language as implemented in Tarskis World nor the
language of set theory has function symbols, there are languages that use
them extensively. One such first-order language is the language of arithmetic.
This language allows us to express statements about the natural numbers
0, 1, 2, 3, . . . , and the usual operations of addition and multiplication.
There are several more or less equivalent ways of setting up this language.
predicates (=, <) and The one we will use has two names, 0 and 1, two binary relation symbols, =
functions (+, ) of and <, and two binary function symbols, + and . The atomic sentences are
arithmetic those that can be built up out of these symbols. We will use infix notation
both for the relation symbols and the function symbols.
Notice that there are infinitely many dierent terms in this language (for
example, 0, 1, (1 + 1), ((1 + 1) + 1), (((1 + 1) + 1) + 1), . . . ), and so an infinite
number of atomic sentences. Our list also shows that every natural number is
named by some term of the language. This raises the question of how we can
specify the set of terms in a precise way. We cant list them all explicitly, since
Chapter 1
The first-order language of arithmetic / 39
there are too many. The way we get around this is by using what is known as
an inductive definition.
Definition The terms of first-order arithmetic are formed in the following terms of arithmetic
way:
1. The names 0, 1 are terms.
2. If t1 , t2 are terms, then the expressions (t1 + t2 ) and (t1 t2 ) are also
terms.
We should point out that this definition does indeed allow the function
symbols to be applied over and over. Thus, (1 + 1) is a term by clause 2 and
the fact that 1 is a term. In which case ((1 + 1) (1 + 1)) is also a term, again
by clause 2. And so forth.
The third clause in the above definition is not as straightforward as one
might want, since the phrase can be obtained by repeated application of is
a bit vague. In Chapter 16, we will see how to give definitions like the above
in a more satisfactory way, one that avoids this vague clause.
The atomic sentences in the language of first-order arithmetic are those atomic sentences of
that can be formed from the terms and the two binary predicate symbols, = arithmetic
and <. So, for example, the fol version of 1 times 1 is less than 1 plus 1 is
the following:
(1 1) < (1 + 1)
Exercises
1.20 Show that the following expressions are terms in the first-order language of arithmetic. Do this
. by explaining which clauses of the definition are applied and in what order. What numbers do
they refer to?
1. (0 + 0)
2. (0 + (1 0))
3. ((1 + 1) + ((1 + 1) (1 + 1)))
4. (((1 1) 1) 1)
1.21 Find a way to express the fact that three 1.22 Show that there are infinitely many
. is less than four using the first-order lan- .
terms in the first-order language of
guage of arithmetic. arithmetic referring to the number one.
Section 1.7
40 / Atomic Sentences
Section 1.8
Alternative notation
As we said before, fol is like a family of languages. But, as if that were not
enough diversity, even the very same first-order language comes in a variety
of dialects. Indeed, almost no two logic books use exactly the same notational
conventions in writing first-order sentences. For this reason, it is important
to have some familiarity with the dierent dialectsthe dierent notational
conventionsand to be able to translate smoothly between them. At the end
of most chapters, we discuss common notational dierences that you are likely
to encounter.
Some notational dierences, though not many, occur even at the level of
atomic sentences. For example, some authors insist on putting parentheses
around atomic sentences whose binary predicates are in infix position. So
(a = b) is used rather than a = b. By contrast, some authors omit parentheses
surrounding the argument positions (and the commas between them) when
the predicate is in prefix position. These authors use Rab instead of R(a, b).
We have opted for the latter simply because we use predicates made up of
several letters, and the parentheses make it clear where the predicate ends
and the arguments begin: Cubed is not nearly as perspicuous as Cube(d).
What is important in these choices is that sentences should be unambigu-
ous and easy to read. Typically, the first aim requires parentheses to be used in
one way or another, while the second suggests using no more than is necessary.
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Section 2.1
Valid and sound arguments
Just what do we mean by logical consequence? Or rather, since this phrase
is sometimes used in quite dierent contexts, what does a logician mean by
logical consequence?
A few examples will help. First, lets say that an argument is any series arguments, premises,
of statements in which one (called the conclusion) is meant to follow from, or and conclusions
be supported by, the others (called the premises). Dont think of two people
arguing back and forth, but of one person trying to convince another of some
conclusion on the basis of mutually accepted premises. Arguments in our
sense may appear as part of the more disagreeable sort of arguments
the kind parents have with their childrenbut our arguments also appear
41
42 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
Lucretius is a man. After all, Lucretius is mortal and all men are
mortal.
One dierence between these two arguments is the placement of the con-
clusion. In the first argument, the conclusion comes at the end, while in the
second, it comes at the start. This is indicated by the words so and after all,
respectively. A more important dierence is that the first argument is good,
while the second is bad. We will say that the first argument is logically valid,
logical consequence or that its conclusion is a logical consequence of its premises. The reason we
say this is that it is impossible for this conclusion to be false if the premises are
true. In contrast, our second conclusion might be false (suppose Lucretius is
my pet goldfish), even though the premises are true (goldfish are notoriously
mortal). The second conclusion is not a logical consequence of its premises.
logically valid Roughly speaking, an argument is logically valid if and only if the conclu-
arguments sion must be true on the assumption that the premises are true. Notice that
this does not mean that an arguments premises have to be true in order for it
to be valid. When we give arguments, we naturally intend the premises to be
true, but sometimes were wrong about that. Well say more about this possi-
bility in a minute. In the meantime, note that our first example above would
be a valid argument even if it turned out that we were mistaken about one
of the premises, say if Socrates turned out to be a robot rather than a man.
It would still be impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion
false. In that eventuality, we would still say that the argument was logically
valid, but since it had a false premise, we would not be guaranteed that the
conclusion was true. It would be a valid argument with a false premise.
Here is another example of a valid argument, this time one expressed in
the blocks language. Suppose we are told that Cube(c) and that c = b. Then it
certainly follows that Cube(b). Why? Because there is no possible way for the
premises to be truefor c to be a cube and for c to be the very same object
as bwithout the conclusion being true as well. Note that we can recognize
that the last statement is a consequence of the first two without knowing that
Chapter 2
Valid and sound arguments / 43
the premises are actually, as a matter of fact, true. For the crucial observation
is that if the premises are true, then the conclusion must also be true.
A valid argument is one that guarantees the truth of its conclusion on
the assumption that the premises are true. Now, as we said before, when we
actually present arguments, we want them to be more than just valid: we also
want the premises to be true. If an argument is valid and the premises are also
true, then the argument is said to be sound. Thus a sound argument insures sound arguments
the truth of its conclusion. The argument about Socrates given above was not
only valid, it was sound, since its premises were true. (He was not, contrary
to rumors, a robot.) But here is an example of a valid argument that is not
sound:
All rich actors are good actors. Brad Pitt is a rich actor. So he must
be a good actor.
The reason this argument is unsound is that its first premise is false.
Because of this, although the argument is indeed valid, we are not assured
that the conclusion is true. It may be, but then again it may not. We in fact
think that Brad Pitt is a good actor, but the present argument does not show
this.
Logic focuses, for the most part, on the validity of arguments, rather than
their soundness. There is a simple reason for this. The truth of an arguments
premises is generally an issue that is none of the logicians business: the truth
of Socrates is a man is something historians had to ascertain; the falsity of
All rich actors are good actors is something a movie critic might weigh in
about. What logicians can tell you is how to reason correctly, given what you
know or believe to be true. Making sure that the premises of your arguments
are true is something that, by and large, we leave up to you.
In this book, we often use a special format to display arguments, which we
call Fitch format after the logician Frederic Fitch. The format makes clear Fitch format
which sentences are premises and which is the conclusion. In Fitch format, we
would display the above, unsound argument like this:
Here, the sentences above the short, horizontal line are the premises, and
the sentence below the line is the conclusion. We call the horizontal line the
Fitch bar. Notice that we have omitted the words So . . . must be . . . in the Fitch bar
conclusion, because they were in the original only to make clear which sen-
tence was supposed to be the conclusion of the argument. In our conventional
Section 2.1
44 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
format, the Fitch bar gives us this information, and so these words are no
longer needed.
Remember
Exercises
2.1 (Classifying arguments) Open the file Socrates Sentences. This file contains eight arguments
|. separated by dashed lines, with the premises and conclusion of each labeled.
1. In the first column of the following table, classify each of these arguments as valid or
invalid. In making these assessments, you may presuppose any general features of the
worlds that can be built in Tarskis World (for example, that two blocks cannot occupy
the same square on the grid).
Sound in Sound in
Argument Valid? Socrates World? Wittgensteins World?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
2. Now open Socrates World and evaluate each sentence. Use the results of your evaluation
to enter sound or unsound in each row of the second column in the table, depending on
whether the argument is sound or unsound in this world. (Remember that only valid
arguments can be sound; invalid arguments are automatically unsound.)
3. Open Wittgensteins World and fill in the third column of the table.
Chapter 2
Valid and sound arguments / 45
4. For each argument that you have marked invalid in the table, construct a world in
which the arguments premises are all true but the conclusion is false. Submit the
world as World 2.1.x, where x is the number of the argument. (If you have trouble
doing this, you may want to rethink your assessment of the arguments validity.) Turn
in your completed table to your instructor.
This problem makes a very important point, one that students of logic sometimes forget. The
point is that the validity of an argument depends only on the argument, not on facts about
the specific world the statements are about. The soundness of an argument, on the other hand,
depends on both the argument and the world.
By the way, the Grade Grinder will only tell you that the files that you submit are or are
not counterexamples. For obvious reasons, if there is a counterexample to an argument but you
dont submit one, the Grade Grinder will not complain (to you, but it will tell the instructor).
2.2 (Classifying arguments) For each of the arguments below, identify the premises and conclusion
. by putting the argument into Fitch format. Then say whether the argument is valid. For the
first five arguments, also give your opinion about whether they are sound. (Remember that
only valid arguments can be sound.) If your assessment of an argument depends on particular
interpretations of the predicates, explain these dependencies.
1. Anyone who wins an academy award is famous. Meryl Streep won an academy award.
Hence, Meryl Streep is famous.
2. Harrison Ford is not famous. After all, actors who win academy awards are famous,
and he has never won one.
3. The right to bear arms is the most important freedom. Charlton Heston said so, and
hes never wrong.
4. Al Gore must be dishonest. After all, hes a politician and hardly any politicians are
honest.
5. Mark Twain lived in Hannibal, Missouri, since Sam Clemens was born there, and Mark
Twain is Sam Clemens.
6. No one under 21 bought beer here last night, ocer. Geez, we were closed, so no one
bought anything last night.
7. Claire must live on the same street as Laura, since she lives on the same street as Max
and he and Laura live on the same street.
2.3 For each of the arguments below, identify the premises and conclusion by putting the argument
. into Fitch format, and state whether the argument is valid. If your assessment of an argument
depends on particular interpretations of the predicates, explain these dependencies.
1. Many of the students in the film class attend film screenings. Consequently, there must
be many students in the film class.
2. There are few students in the film class, but many of them attend the film screenings.
So there are many students in the film class.
Section 2.1
46 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
3. There are many students in the film class. After all, many students attend film screen-
ings and only students in the film class attend screenings.
4. There are thirty students in my logic class. Some of the students turned in their
homework on time. Most of the students went to the all-night party. So some student
who went to the party managed to turn in the homework on time.
5. There are thirty students in my logic class. Some student who went to the all-night
party must have turned in the homework on time. Some of the students turned in their
homework on time, and they all went to the party.
6. There are thirty students in my logic class. Most of the students turned in their home-
work on time. Most of the students went to the all-night party. Thus, some student
who went to the party turned in the homework on time.
2.4 (Validity and truth) Can a valid argument have false premises and a false conclusion? False
. premises and a true conclusion? True premises and a false conclusion? True premises and a
true conclusion? If you answer yes to any of these, give an example of such an argument. If
your answer is no, explain why.
Section 2.2
Methods of proof
Chapter 2
Methods of proof / 47
Section 2.2
48 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
You then began to prove conclusions, called theorems, from these axioms. As
you went on to prove more interesting theorems, your proofs would cite earlier
theorems. These earlier theorems were treated as intermediate conclusions in
justifying the new results. What this means is that the complete proofs of
the later theorems really include the proofs of the earlier theorems that they
presuppose. Thus, if they were written out in full, they would contain hundreds
or perhaps thousands of steps. Now suppose we only insisted that each step
show with probability .99 that the conclusion follows from the premises. Then
each step in such a proof would be a pretty good bet, but given a long enough
proof, the proof would carry virtually no weight at all about the truth of the
conclusion.
This demand for certainty becomes even more important in proofs done by
computers. Nowadays, theorems are sometimes proven by computers, and the
proofs can be millions of steps long. If we allowed even the slightest uncertainty
in the individual steps, then this uncertainty would multiply until the alleged
proof made the truth of the conclusion no more likely than its falsity.
Each time we introduce new types of expressions into our language, we will
methods of proof discuss new methods of proof supported by those expressions. We begin by
discussing the main informal methods of proof used in mathematics, science,
and everyday life, emphasizing the more important methods like indirect and
conditional proof. Following this discussion we will formalize the methods
formal systems by incorporating them into what we call a formal system of deduction. A
formal system of deduction uses a fixed set of rules specifying what counts as
an acceptable step in a proof.
The dierence between an informal proof and a formal proof is not one of
informal proofs rigor, but of style. An informal proof of the sort used by mathematicians is
every bit as rigorous as a formal proof. But it is stated in English and is usu-
ally more free-wheeling, leaving out the more obvious steps. For example, we
could present our earlier argument about Socrates in the form of the following
informal proof:
Proof: Since Socrates is a man and all men are mortal, it follows
that Socrates is mortal. But all mortals will eventually die, since
that is what it means to be mortal. So Socrates will eventually die.
But we are given that everyone who will eventually die sometimes
worries about it. Hence Socrates sometimes worries about dying.
formal proofs A formal proof, by contrast, employs a fixed stock of rules and a highly styl-
ized method of presentation. For example, the simple argument from Cube(c)
and c = b to Cube(b) discussed in the last section will, in our formal system,
take the following form:
Chapter 2
Methods of proof / 49
1. Cube(c)
2. c = b
3. Cube(b) = Elim: 1, 2
As you can see, we use an extension of the Fitch format as a way of presenting
formal proofs. The main dierence is that a formal proof will usually have more
than one step following the Fitch bar (though not in this example), and each
of these steps will be justified by citing a rule of the formal system. We will
explain later the various conventions used in formal proofs.
In the course of this book you will learn how to give both informal and formal vs. informal
formal proofs. We do not want to give the impression that formal proofs are proofs
somehow better than informal proofs. On the contrary, for purposes of proving
things for ourselves, or communicating proofs to others, informal methods are
usually preferable. Formal proofs come into their own in two ways. One is that
they display the logical structure of a proof in a form that can be mechanically
checked. There are advantages to this, if you are a logic teacher grading lots
of homework, a computer, or not inclined to think for some other reason. The
other is that they allow us to prove things about provability itself, such as
Godels Completeness Theorem and Incompleteness Theorems, discussed in
the final section of this book.
Remember
Section 2.2
50 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
nation, abbreviated = Elim. The reason for this name is that an application
of this rule eliminates a use of the identity symbol when we move from the
premises of the argument to its conclusion. We will have another rule that
introduces the identity symbol.
The principle of identity elimination is used repeatedly in mathematics.
For example, the following derivation uses the principle in conjunction with
the well-known algebraic identity x2 1 = (x 1)(x + 1):
x2 > x2 1
so
x2 > (x 1)(x + 1)
We are all familiar with reasoning that uses such substitutions repeatedly.
Another principle, so simple that one often overlooks it, is the so-called
reflexivity of identity or reflexivity of identity. The formal rule corresponding to it is called Identity
identity introduction Introduction, or = Intro, since it allows us to introduce identity statements
into proofs. It tells us that any sentence of the form a = a can be validly
inferred from whatever premises are at hand, or from no premises at all. This
is because of the assumption made in fol that names always refer to one and
only one object. This is not true about English, as we have noted before. But
it is in fol, which means that in a proof you can always take any name a
that is in use and assert a = a, if it suits your purpose for some reason. (As a
matter of fact, it is rarely of much use.) Gertrude Stein was surely referring
to this principle when she observed A rose is a rose is a rose.
symmetry of identity Another principle, a bit more useful, is that of the symmetry of identity. It
allows us to conclude b = a from a = b. Actually, if we wanted, we could derive
this as a consequence of our first two principles, by means of the following
proof.
Chapter 2
Methods of proof / 51
A third principle about identity that bears noting is its so-called transiti- transitivity of identity
vity. If a = b and b = c are both true, then so is a = c. This is so obvious
that there is no particular need to prove it, but it can be proved using the
indiscernibility of identicals. (See Exercise 2.5.)
If you are using a language that contains function symbols (introduced
in the optional Section 1.5), the identity principles weve discussed also hold
for complex terms built up using function symbols. For example, if you know
that Happy(john) and john = father(max), you can use identity elimination to
conclude Happy(father(max)), even though father(max) is a complex term, not
a name. In fact, the example where we substituted (x 1)(x + 1) for x2 1
also applied the indiscernibility of identicals to complex terms.
Remember
There are four important principles that hold of the identity relation:
2. = Intro: Sentences of the form b = b are always true (in fol). This
is also known as the reflexivity of identity.
Section 2.2
52 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
k1 < k2
k2 < k3
k3 < k4
so
k1 < k 4
RightOf(b, c)
LeftOf(d, e)
b=d
LeftOf(c, e)
Chapter 2
Methods of proof / 53
Exercises
2.5 (Transitivity of Identity) Give an in- 2.6 Give an informal proof that the follow-
. formal proof of the following argument . ing argument is valid. If you proved the
using only indiscernibility of identicals. transitivity of identity by doing Exer-
Make sure you say which name is be- cise 2.5, you may use this principle; oth-
ing substituted for which, and in what erwise, use only the indiscernibility of
sentence. identicals.
b=c SameRow(a, a)
a=b a=b
b=c
a=c
SameRow(c, a)
Does (3) follow from (1) and (2)? Does (2) follow from (1) and (3)? Does (1) follow from (2) and
(3)? In each case, if your answer is no, describe a possible circumstance in which the premises
are true and the conclusion false.
Given the meanings of the atomic predicates in the blocks language, assess the following arguments for
validity. (You may again assume any general facts about the worlds that can be built in Tarskis World.)
If the argument is valid, give an informal proof of its validity and turn it in on paper to your instructor.
If the conclusion is not a consequence of the premises, submit a world in which the premises are true
and the conclusion false.
Section 2.2
54 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
2.14 Between(b, a, c)
|. LeftOf(a, c)
LeftOf(a, b)
Section 2.3
Formal proofs
In this section we will begin introducing our system for presenting formal
deductive systems proofs, what is known as a deductive system. There are many dierent
styles of deductive systems. The system we present in the first two parts of
the system F the book, which we will call F, is a Fitch-style system, so called because
Frederic Fitch first introduced this format for giving proofs. We will look at
a very dierent deductive system in Part III, one known as the resolution
method, which is of considerable importance in computer science.
In the system F, a proof of a conclusion S from premises P, Q, and R, looks
very much like an argument presented in Fitch format. The main dierence is
that the proof displays, in addition to the conclusion S, all of the intermediate
conclusions S1 , . . . , Sn that we derive in getting from the premises to the
conclusion S:
P
Q
R
S1 Justification 1
.. ..
. .
Sn Justification n
S Justification n+1
There are two graphical devices to notice here, the vertical and horizontal
lines. The vertical line that runs on the left of the steps draws our attention
to the fact that we have a single purported proof consisting of a sequence
of several steps. The horizontal Fitch bar indicates the division between the
claims that are assumed and those that allegedly follow from them. Thus the
fact that P, Q, and R are above the bar shows that these are the premises of
our proof, while the fact that S1 , . . . , Sn , and S are below the bar shows that
these sentences are supposed to follow logically from the premises.
Chapter 2
Formal proofs / 55
Notice that on the right of every step below the Fitch bar, we give a
justification of the step. In our deductive system, a justification indicates justification
which rule allows us to make the step, and which earlier steps (if any) the rule
is applied to. In giving an actual formal proof, we will number the steps, so
we can refer to them in justifying later steps.
We already gave one example of a formal proof in the system F, back on
page 48. For another example, here is a formalization of our informal proof of
the symmetry of identity.
1. a = b
2. a = a = Intro
3. b = a = Elim: 2, 1
In the right hand margin of this proof you find a justification for each step
below the Fitch bar. These are applications of rules we are about to introduce.
The numbers at the right of step 3 show that this step follows from steps 2
and 1 by means of the rule cited.
The first rule we use in the above proof is Identity Introduction. This = Intro
rule allows you to introduce, for any name (or complex term) n in use in
the proof, the assertion n = n. You are allowed to do this at any step in the
proof, and need not cite any earlier step as justification. We will abbreviate
our statement of this rule in the following way:
n=n
Section 2.3
56 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
P(n)
..
.
n=m
..
.
P(m)
When we apply this rule, it does not matter which of P(n) and n = m occurs
first in the proof, as long as they both appear before P(m), the inferred step.
In justifying the step, we cite the name of the rule, followed by the steps in
which P(n) and n = m occur, in that order.
We could also introduce rules justified by the meanings of other predicates
besides = into the system F. For example, we could introduce a formal rule
of the following sort:
Bidirectionality of Between:
Between(a, b, c)
..
.
Between(a, c, b)
We dont do this because there are just too many such rules. We could state
them for a few predicates, but certainly not all of the predicates you will
encounter in first-order languages.
Reiteration There is one rule that is not technically necessary, but which will make
some proofs look more natural. This rule is called Reiteration, and simply
allows you to repeat an earlier step, if you so desire.
Reiteration (Reit):
P
..
.
P
To use the Reiteration rule, just repeat the sentence in question and, on the
right, write Reit: x, where x is the number of the earlier occurrence of the
sentence.
Chapter 2
Formal proofs / 57
1. SameRow(a, a)
2. b = a
..
.
?. SameRow(b, a)
It might at first seem that this proof should be a one step application of
= Elim. But notice that the way we have stated this rule requires that we
replace the first name in the identity sentence, b, for the second, a, but we
want to substitute the other way around. So we need to derive a = b as an
intermediate conclusion before we can apply = Elim.
1. SameRow(a, a)
2. b = a
..
.
?. a = b
?. SameRow(b, a) = Elim: 1, ?
Since we have already seen how to prove the symmetry of identity, we can
now fill in all the steps of the proof. The finished proof looks like this. Make
sure you understand why all the steps are there and how we arrived at them.
1. SameRow(a, a)
2. b = a
3. b = b = Intro
4. a = b = Elim: 3, 2
5. SameRow(b, a) = Elim: 1, 4
Section 2.3
58 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
Section 2.4
Constructing proofs in Fitch
Writing out a long formal proof in complete detail, let alone reading or check-
ing it, can be a pretty tedious business. The system F makes this less painful
than many formal systems, but its still not easy. This book comes with a sec-
the program Fitch ond program, Fitch, that makes constructing formal proofs much less painful.
Fitch can also check your proof, telling you whether it is correct, and if it isnt,
which step or steps are mistaken. This means you will never be in any doubt
about whether your formal proofs meet the standard of rigor demanded of
them. And, as a practical matter, you can make sure they are correct before
submitting them.
There are other ways in which Fitch makes life simpler, as well. One is that
Fitch vs. F Fitch is more flexible than the system F. It lets you take certain shortcuts
that are logically correct but do not, strictly speaking, fall under the rules of
F. You can always go back and expand a proof in Fitch to a formally correct
F proof, but we wont often insist on this.
Let us now use Fitch to construct a simple formal proof. Before going on,
you will want to read the first few sections of the chapter on how to use Fitch
in the manual.
You try it
................................................................
1. We are going to use Fitch to construct the formal proof of SameRow(b, a)
from premises SameRow(a, a) and b = a. Launch Fitch and open the file
Identity 1. Here we have the beginnings of the formal proof. The premises
appear above the Fitch bar. It may look slightly dierent from the proofs
we have in the book, since in Fitch the steps dont have to be numbered,
for reasons well soon find out. (If you would like to have numbered steps,
you can choose Show Step Numbers from the Proof menu. But dont
try this yet.)
2. Before we start to construct the proof, notice that at the bottom of the
proof window there is a separate panel called the goal strip, contain-
ing the goal of the proof. In this case the goal is to prove the sentence
SameRow(b, a). If we successfully satisfy this goal, we will be able to get
Fitch to put a checkmark to the right of the goal.
3. Lets construct the proof. What we need to do is fill in the steps needed
to complete the proof, just as we did at the end of the last section. Add
Chapter 2
Constructing proofs in Fitch / 59
a new step to the proof by choosing Add Step After from the Proof
menu. In the new step, enter the sentence a = b, either by typing it in or
by using the toolbar at the top of the proof window. We will first use this
step to get our conclusion and then go back and prove this step.
4. Once you have entered a = b, add another step below this and enter the
goal sentence SameRow(b, a). Use the mouse to click on the word Rule?
that appears to the right of SameRow(b, a). In the menu that pops up, go
to the Elimination Rules and select =. If you did this right, the rule name
should now say = Elim. If not, try again.
5. Next cite the first premise and the intermediate sentence you first entered.
You do this in Fitch by clicking on the two sentences, in either order. If
you click on the wrong one, just click again and it will be un-cited. Once
you have the right sentences cited, choose Verify Proof from the Proof
menu. The last step should now check out, as it is a valid instance of =
Elim. The step containing a = b will not check out, since we havent yet
indicated what it follows from. Nor will the goal check out, since we dont
yet have a complete proof of SameRow(b, a). All in good time.
6. Now add a step before the first introduced step (the one containing a = b),
and enter the sentence b = b. Do this by moving the focus slider (the
triangle in the left margin) to the step containing a = b and choosing
Add Step Before from the Proof menu. (If the new step appears in
the wrong place, choose Delete Step from the Proof menu.) Enter the
sentence b = b and justify it by using the rule = Intro. Check the step.
7. Finally, justify the step containing a = b by using the = Elim rule. You
will need to move the focus slider to this step, and then cite the second
premise and the sentence b = b. Now the whole proof, including the goal,
should check out. To find out if it does, choose Verify Proof from the
Proof menu. The proof should look like the completed proof on page 57,
except for the absence of numbers on the steps. (Try out Show Step
Numbers from the Proof menu now. The highlighting on support steps
will go away and numbers will appear, just like in the book.)
8. We mentioned earlier that Fitch lets you take some shortcuts, allowing
you to do things in one step that would take several if we adhered strictly
to F. This proof is a case in point. We have constructed a proof that falls
under F but Fitch actually has symmetry of identity built into = Elim.
So we could prove the conclusion directly from the two premises, using a
single application of the rule = Elim. Well do this next.
Section 2.4
60 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
9. Add another step at the very end of your proof. Heres a trick you will find
handy: Click on the goal sentence at the very bottom of the window. This
puts the focus on the goal sentence. Choose Copy from the Edit menu,
and then click back on the empty step at the end of your proof. Choose
Paste from the Edit menu and the goal sentence will be entered into this
step. This time, justify the new step using = Elim and citing just the two
premises. You will see that the step checks out.
Since the proof system F does not have any rules for atomic predicates
other than identity, neither does Fitch. However, Fitch does have a mecha-
nism that, among other things, lets you check for consequences among atomic
sentences that involve many of the predicates in the blocks world language.1
Analytic Consequence This is a rule we call Analytic Consequence or Ana Con for short. Ana
Con is not restricted to atomic sentences, but that is the only application
of the rule we will discuss at the moment. This rule allows you to cite some
sentences in support of a claim if any world that makes the cited sentences
true also makes the conclusion true, given the meaning of the predicates as
used in Tarskis World. Lets get a feeling for Ana Con with some examples.
You try it
................................................................
1. Use Fitch to open the file Ana Con 1. In this file you will find nine premises
followed by six conclusions that are consequences of these premises. Indeed,
each of the conclusions follows from three or fewer of the premises.
2. Position the focus slider (the little triangle) at the first conclusion following
the Fitch bar, SameShape(c, b). We have invoked the rule Ana Con but
we have not cited any sentences. This conclusion follows from Cube(b) and
Cube(c). Cite these sentences and check the step.
3. Now move the focus slider to the step containing SameRow(b, a). Since
the relation of being in the same row is symmetric and transitive, this
follows from SameRow(b, c) and SameRow(a, c). Cite these two sentences
and check the step.
1 This mechanism does not handle the predicates Adjoins and Between, due to the com-
plexity of the ways the meanings of these predicates interact with the others.
Chapter 2
Constructing proofs in Fitch / 61
4. The third conclusion, BackOf(e, c), follows from three of the premises. See
if you can find them. Cite them. If you get it wrong, Fitch will give you
an X when you try to check the step.
5. Now fill in the citations needed to make the fourth and fifth conclusions
check out. For these, you will have to invoke the Ana Con rule your-
self. (You will find the rule on the Con submenu of the Rule? popup.)
Remember, you may only cite the premises, not previous conclusions.
6. The final conclusion, SameCol(b, b), does not require that any premises be
cited in support. It is simply an analytic truth, that is, true in virtue of
its meaning. Specify the rule and check this step.
7. When you are done, choose Verify Proof to see that all the goals check
out. Save your work as Proof Ana Con 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
The Ana Con mechanism is not really a rule, technically speaking, though rules vs. Con
we will continue to call it that since it appears on the Rule? menu in Fitch. mechanisms
This mechanism, along with the two others appearing on the Con submenu,
apply complicated procedures to see whether the sentence in question follows
from the cited sentences. As we will explain later, these three items try to find
proofs of the sentence in question behind the scenes, and then give you a
checkmark if they succeed. The proof they find may in fact apply many, many
dierent rules in getting from the cited steps to the target sentence.
The main dierence you will run into between the genuine rules in Fitch
and the mechanisms appearing on the Con menu is that the latter rules
will sometimes fail even though your step is actually correct. With the genuine
rules, Fitch will always give your step either a checkmark or an X, depending
on whether the rule is applied correctly. But with the Con mechanisms, Fitch
will sometimes try to find a proof of the target sentence but fail. In these
cases, Fitch will give the step a question mark rather than a check or an X,
since there might be a complicated proof that it just couldnt find.
To mark the dierence between the genuine rules of F and the three con-
sequence mechanisms, Fitch displays the rule names in green and the conse-
quence mechanisms in blue. Because the Con mechanisms look for a proof
behind the scenes, we will often ask you not to use them in giving solutions to
homework problems. After all, the point is not to have Fitch do your home-
work for you! In the following problems, you should only use the Ana Con
rule if we explicitly say you can. To see whether a problem allows you to use
Section 2.4
62 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
any of the Con mechanisms, double click on the goal or choose View Goal
Constraints from the Goal menu.
Remember
Exercises
2.15 If you skipped the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files Proof
Identity 1 and Proof Ana Con 1.
2.16 Use Fitch to give a formal version of the informal proof you gave in Exercise 2.5. Remember,
you will find the problem setup in the file Exercise 2.16. You should begin your proof from this
saved file. Save your completed proof as Proof 2.16.
In the following exercises, use Fitch to construct a formal proof that the conclusion is a consequence of
the premises. Remember, begin your proof by opening the corresponding file, Exercise 2.x, and save your
solution as Proof 2.x. Were going to stop reminding you.
Chapter 2
Demonstrating nonconsequence / 63
Section 2.5
Demonstrating nonconsequence
Section 2.5
64 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
informal proofs of showing the existence of a counterexample. We might simply describe what is
nonconsequence clearly a possible situation, one that makes the premises true and the conclu-
sion false. This is the technique used by defense attorneys, who hope to create
a reasonable doubt that their client is guilty (the prosecutors conclusion) in
spite of the evidence in the case (the prosecutions premises). We might draw
a picture of such a situation or build a model out of Lego blocks or clay.
We might act out a situation. Anything that clearly shows the existence of a
counterexample is fair game.
Recall the following argument from an earlier exercise.
Al Gore is a politician.
Hardly any politicians are honest.
Al Gore is dishonest.
If the premises of this argument are true, then the conclusion is likely. But
still the argument is not valid: the conclusion is not a logical consequence of
the premises. How can we see this? Well, imagine a situation where there are
10,000 politicians, and that Al Gore is the only honest one of the lot. In such
circumstances both premises would be true but the conclusion would be false.
Such a situation is a counterexample to the argument; it demonstrates that
the argument is invalid.
What we have just given is an informal proof of nonconsequence. Are
there such things as formal proofs of nonconsequence, similar to the formal
proofs of validity constructed in F? In general, no. But we will define the
notion of a formal proof of nonconsequence for the blocks language used in
Tarskis World. These formal proofs of nonconsequence are simply stylized
counterparts of informal counterexamples.
formal proofs of For the blocks language, we will say that a formal proof that Q is not a
nonconsequence consequence of P1 , . . . , Pn consists of a sentence file with P1 , . . . , Pn labeled
as premises, Q labeled as conclusion, and a world file that makes each of
P1 , . . . , Pn true and Q false. The world depicted in the world file will be called
the counterexample to the argument in the sentence file.
You try it
................................................................
1. Launch Tarskis World and open the sentence file Bills Argument. This
argument claims that Between(b, a, d) follows from these three premises:
Between(b, c, d), Between(a, b, d), and LeftOf(a, c). Do you think it does?
2. Start a new world and put four blocks, labeled a, b, c, and d on one row
of the grid.
Chapter 2
Demonstrating nonconsequence / 65
3. Arrange the blocks so that the conclusion is false. Check the premises. If
any of them are false, rearrange the blocks until they are all true. Is the
conclusion still false? If not, keep trying.
4. If you have trouble, try putting them in the order d, a, b, c. Now you will
find that all the premises are true but the conclusion is false. This world is
a counterexample to the argument. Thus we have demonstrated that the
conclusion does not follow from the premises.
Remember
Exercises
2.21 If you have skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the world file World
Counterexample 1.
2.22 Is the following argument valid? Sound? If it is valid, give an informal proof of it. If it is not
. valid, give an informal counterexample to it.
All computer scientists are rich. Anyone who knows how to program a computer is a
computer scientist. Bill Gates is rich. Therefore, Bill Gates knows how to program a
computer.
2.23 Is the following argument valid? Sound? If it is valid, give an informal proof of it. If it is not
. valid, give an informal counterexample to it.
Philosophers have the intelligence needed to be computer scientists. Anyone who be-
comes a computer scientist will eventually become wealthy. Anyone with the intelli-
gence needed to be a computer scientist will become one. Therefore, every philosopher
will become wealthy.
Section 2.5
66 / The Logic of Atomic Sentences
Each of the following problems presents a formal argument in the blocks language. If the argument is
valid, submit a proof of it using Fitch. (You will find Exercise files for each of these in the usual place.)
Important: if you use Ana Con in your proof, cite at most two sentences in each application. If the
argument is not valid, submit a counterexample world using Tarskis World.
Section 2.6
Alternative notation
You will often see arguments presented in the following way, rather than
in Fitch format. The symbol ... (read therefore) is used to indicate the
conclusion:
There is a huge variety of formal deductive systems, each with its own
notation. We cant possibly cover all of these alternatives, though we describe
one, the resolution method, in Chapter 17.
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
So far, we have discussed only atomic claims. To form complex claims, fol pro-
vides us with connectives and quantifiers. In this chapter we take up the three
simplest connectives: conjunction, disjunction, and negation, corresponding
to simple uses of the English and, or, and it is not the case that. Because they Boolean connectives
were first studied systematically by the English logician George Boole, they
are called the Boolean operators or Boolean connectives.
The Boolean connectives are also known as truth-functional connectives. truth-functional
There are additional truth-functional connectives which we will talk about connectives
later. These connectives are called truth functional because the truth value
of a complex sentence built up using these connectives depends on nothing
more than the truth values of the simpler sentences from which it is built.
Because of this, we can explain the meaning of a truth-functional connective
in a couple of ways. Perhaps the easiest is by constructing a truth table, a truth table
table that shows how the truth value of a sentence formed with the connec-
tive depends on the truth values of the sentences immediate parts. We will
give such tables for each of the connectives we introduce. A more interesting Henkin-Hintikka game
way, and one that can be particularly illuminating, is by means of a game,
sometimes called the Henkin-Hintikka game, after the logicians Leon Henkin
and Jaakko Hintikka.
Imagine that two people, say Max and Claire, disagree about the truth
value of a complex sentence. Max claims it is true, Claire claims it is false. The
two repeatedly challenge one another to justify their claims in terms of simpler
claims, until finally their disagreement is reduced to a simple atomic claim,
one involving an atomic sentence. At that point they can simply examine the
world to see whether the atomic claim is trueat least in the case of claims
about the sorts of worlds we find in Tarskis World. These successive challenges
can be thought of as a game where one player will win, the other will lose. The
legal moves at any stage depend on the form of the sentence. We will explain
them below. The one who can ultimately justify his or her claims is the winner.
When you play this game in Tarskis World, the computer takes the side
opposite you, even if it knows you are right. If you are mistaken in your initial
assessment, the computer will be sure to win the game. If you are right,
though, the computer plugs away, hoping you will blunder. If you slip up, the
computer will win the game. We will use the game rules as a second way of
explaining the meanings of the truth-functional connectives.
67
68 / The Boolean Connectives
Section 3.1
Negation symbol:
The symbol is used to express negation in our language, the notion we
commonly express in English using terms like not, it is not the case that, non-
and un-. In first-order logic, we always apply this symbol to the front of a
sentence to be negated, while in English there is a much more subtle system
for expressing negative claims. For example, the English sentences John isnt
home and It is not the case that John is home have the same first-order
translation:
Home(john)
This sentence is true if and only if Home(john) isnt true, that is, just in case
John isnt home.
In English, we generally avoid double negativesnegatives inside other
negatives. For example, the sentence It doesnt make no dierence is problem-
atic. If someone says it, they usually mean that it doesnt make any dierence.
In other words, the second negative just functions as an intensifier of some
sort. On the other hand, this sentence could be used to mean just what it
says, that it does not make no dierence, it makes some dierence.
Fol is much more systematic. You can put a negation symbol in front of
any sentence whatsoever, and it always negates it, no matter how many other
negation symbols the sentence already contains. For example, the sentence
Home(john)
negates the sentence
Home(john)
and so is true if and only if John is home.
The negation symbol, then, can apply to complex sentences as well as to
literals atomic sentences. We will say that a sentence is a literal if it is either atomic
or the negation of an atomic sentence. This notion of a literal will be useful
later on.
nonidentity symbol (=) We will abbreviate negated identity claims, such as (b = c), using =, as
in b = c. The symbol = is available on the keyboard palettes in both Tarskis
World and Fitch.
Chapter 3
Negation symbol: / 69
P P
true false truth table for
false true
The game rule for negation is very simple, since you never have to do game rule for
anything. Once you commit yourself to the truth of P this is the same as
committing yourself to the falsity of P. Similarly, if you commit yourself to
the falsity of P, this is tantamount to committing yourself to the truth of
P. So in either case Tarskis World simply replaces your commitment about
the more complex sentence by the opposite commitment about the simpler
sentence.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open Wittgensteins World. Start a new sentence file and write the following
sentence.
Between(e, d, f)
2. Use the Verify Sentence button to check the truth value of the sentence.
3. Now play the game, choosing whichever commitment you please. What
happens to the number of negation symbols as the game proceeds? What
happens to your commitment?
4. Now play the game again with the opposite commitment. If you won the
first time, you should lose this time, and vice versa. Dont feel bad about
losing.
5. There is no need to save the sentence file when you are done.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Remember
Section 3.1
70 / The Boolean Connectives
Exercises
3.1 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. There are no files to submit,
but you wouldnt want to miss it.
3.2 (Assessing negated sentences) Open Booles World and Brouwers Sentences. In the sentence file
you will find a list of sentences built up from atomic sentences using only the negation symbol.
Read each sentence and decide whether you think it is true or false. Check your assessment. If
the sentence is false, make it true by adding or deleting a negation sign. When you have made
all the sentences in the file true, submit the modified file as Sentences 3.2
3.3 (Building a world) Start a new sentence file. Write the following sentences in your file and save
the file as Sentences 3.3.
1. Tet(f)
2. SameCol(c, a)
3. SameCol(c, b)
4. Dodec(f)
5. c = b
6. (d = e)
7. SameShape(f, c)
8. SameShape(d, c)
9. Cube(e)
10. Tet(c)
Now start a new world file and build a world where all these sentences are true. As you modify
the world to make the later sentences true, make sure that you have not accidentally falsified
any of the earlier sentences. When you are done, submit both your sentences and your world.
3.4 Let P be a true sentence, and let Q be formed by putting some number of negation symbols
. in front of P. Show that if you put an even number of negation symbols, then Q is true, but
that if you put an odd number, then Q is false. [Hint: A complete proof of this simple fact
would require what is known as mathematical induction. If you are familiar with proof by
induction, then go ahead and give a proof. If you are not, just explain as clearly as you can
why this is true.]
Now assume that P is atomic but of unknown truth value, and that Q is formed as before.
No matter how many negation symbols Q has, it will always have the same truth value as a
literal, namely either the literal P or the literal P. Describe a simple procedure for determining
which.
Chapter 3
Conjunction symbol: / 71
Section 3.2
Conjunction symbol:
The symbol is used to express conjunction in our language, the notion we
normally express in English using terms like and, moreover, and but. In first-
order logic, this connective is always placed between two sentences, whereas in
English we can also conjoin other parts of speech, such as nouns. For example,
the English sentences John and Mary are home and John is home and Mary
is home have the same first-order translation:
Home(john) Home(mary)
This sentence is read aloud as Home John and home Mary. It is true if and
only if John is home and Mary is home.
In English, we can also conjoin verb phrases, as in the sentence John slipped
and fell. But in fol we must translate this the same way we would translate
John slipped and John fell :
Slipped(john) Fell(john)
This sentence is true if and only if the atomic sentences Slipped(john) and
Fell(john) are both true.
A lot of times, a sentence of fol will contain when there is no visible
sign of conjunction in the English sentence at all. How, for example, do you
think we might express the English sentence d is a large cube in fol? If you
guessed
Large(d) Cube(d)
you were right. This sentence is true if and only if d is large and d is a cube
that is, if d is a large cube.
Some uses of the English and are not accurately mirrored by the fol
conjunction symbol. For example, suppose we are talking about an evening
when Max and Claire were together. If we were to say Max went home and
Claire went to sleep, our assertion would carry with it a temporal implication,
namely that Max went home before Claire went to sleep. Similarly, if we were to
reverse the order and assert Claire went to sleep and Max went home it would
suggest a very dierent sort of situation. By contrast, no such implication,
implicit or explicit, is intended when we use the symbol . The sentence
WentHome(max) FellAsleep(claire)
is true in exactly the same circumstances as
FellAsleep(claire) WentHome(max)
Section 3.2
72 / The Boolean Connectives
The Tarskis World game is more interesting for conjunctions than nega-
game rule for tions. The way the game proceeds depends on whether you have committed
to true or to false. If you commit to the truth of P Q then you have
implicitly committed yourself to the truth of each of P and Q. Thus, Tarskis
World gets to choose either one of these simpler sentences and hold you to the
truth of it. (Which one will Tarskis World choose? If one or both of them are
false, it will choose a false one so that it can win the game. If both are true,
it will choose at random, hoping that you will make a mistake later on.)
If you commit to the falsity of P Q, then you are claiming that at least
one of P or Q is false. In this case, Tarskis World will ask you to choose one of
the two and thereby explicitly commit to its being false. The one you choose
had better be false, or you will eventually lose the game.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open Claires World. Start a new sentence file and enter the sentence
2. Notice that this sentence is false in this world, since c is a cube. Play
the game committed (mistakenly) to the truth of the sentence. You will
see that Tarskis World immediately zeros in on the false conjunct. Your
commitment to the truth of the sentence guarantees that you will lose the
game, but along the way, the reason the sentence is false becomes apparent.
3. Now begin playing the game committed to the falsity of the sentence.
When Tarskis World asks you to choose a conjunct you think is false,
pick the first sentence. This is not the false conjunct, but select it anyway
and see what happens after you choose OK.
Chapter 3
Conjunction symbol: / 73
4. Play until Tarskis World says that you have lost. Then click on Back a
couple of times, until you are back to where you are asked to choose a
false conjunct. This time pick the false conjunct and resume the play of
the game from that point. This time you will win.
5. Notice that you can lose the game even when your original assessment
is correct, if you make a bad choice along the way. But Tarskis World
always allows you to back up and make dierent choices. If your original
assessment is correct, there will always be a way to win the game. If it
is impossible for you to win the game, then your original assessment was
wrong.
6. Save your sentence file as Sentences Game 1 when you are done.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Remember
Exercises
3.5 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Make sure you follow all the
instructions. Submit the file Sentences Game 1.
3.6 Start a new sentence file and open Wittgensteins World. Write the following sentences in the
sentence file.
1. Tet(f) Small(f)
2. Tet(f) Large(f)
3. Tet(f) Small(f)
4. Tet(f) Large(f)
5. Tet(f) Small(f)
6. Tet(f) Large(f)
7. (Tet(f) Small(f))
8. (Tet(f) Large(f))
Section 3.2
74 / The Boolean Connectives
9. (Tet(f) Small(f))
10. (Tet(f) Large(f))
Once you have written these sentences, decide which you think are true. Record your eval-
uations, to help you remember. Then go through and use Tarskis World to evaluate your
assessments. Whenever you are wrong, play the game to see where you went wrong.
If you are never wrong, playing the game will not be very instructive. Play the game a
couple times anyway, just for fun. In particular, try playing the game committed to the falsity
of sentence 9. Since this sentence is true in Wittgensteins World, Tarskis World should be able
to beat you. Make sure you understand everything that happens as the game proceeds.
Next, change the size or shape of block f , predict how this will aect the truth values of
your ten sentences, and see if your prediction is right. What is the maximum number of these
sentences that you can get to be true in a single world? Build a world in which the maximum
number of sentences are true. Submit both your sentence file and your world file, naming them
as usual.
3.7 (Building a world) Open Maxs Sentences. Build a world where all these sentences are true.
You should start with a world with six blocks and make changes to it, trying to make all the
sentences true. Be sure that as you make a later sentence true you do not inadvertently falsify
an earlier sentence.
Section 3.3
Disjunction symbol:
The symbol is used to express disjunction in our language, the notion we
express in English using or. In first-order logic, this connective, like the con-
junction sign, is always placed between two sentences, whereas in English we
can also disjoin nouns, verbs, and other parts of speech. For example, the
English sentences John or Mary is home and John is home or Mary is home
both have the same first-order translation:
Home(john) Home(mary)
Chapter 3
Disjunction symbol: / 75
As you can see, this sentence says that John or Mary is home, but it is not
the case that they are both home.
Many students are tempted to say that the English expression either . . . or
expresses exclusive disjunction. While this is sometimes the case (and indeed
the simple or is often used exclusively), it isnt always. For example, suppose
Pris and Scruy are in the next room and the sound of a cat fight suddenly
breaks out. If we say Either Pris bit Scruy or Scruy bit Pris, we would not
be wrong if each had bit the other. So this would be translated as
We will see later that the expression either sometimes plays a dierent logical
function.
Another important English expression that we can capture without intro-
ducing additional symbols is neither. . . nor. Thus Neither John nor Mary is
at home would be expressed as:
(Home(john) Home(mary))
This says that its not the case that at least one of them is at home, i.e., that
neither of them is home.
P Q PQ
true true true
truth table for
true false true
false true true
false false false
The game rules for are the duals of those for . If you commit yourself game rule for
to the truth of P Q, then Tarskis World will make you live up to this by
committing yourself to the truth of one or the other. If you commit yourself to
the falsity of P Q, then you are implicitly committing yourself to the falsity
Section 3.3
76 / The Boolean Connectives
of each, so Tarskis World will choose one and hold you to the commitment
that it is false. (Tarskis World will, of course, try to win by picking a true
one, if it can.)
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the file Ackermanns World. Start a new sentence file and enter the
sentence
Remember
Exercises
3.8 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Youll be glad you did. Well,
maybe. Submit the file Sentences Game 2.
Chapter 3
Remarks about the game / 77
3.9 Open Wittgensteins World and the sentence file Sentences 3.6 that you created for Exercise 3.6.
Edit the sentences by replacing by throughout, saving the edited list as Sentences 3.9.
Once you have changed these sentences, decide which you think are true. Again, record your
evaluations to help you remember them. Then go through and use Tarskis World to evaluate
your assessment. Whenever you are wrong, play the game to see where you went wrong. If you
are never wrong, then play the game anyway a couple times, knowing that you should win. As
in Exercise 3.6, find the maximum number of sentences you can make true by changing the
size or shape (or both) of block f . Submit both your sentences and world.
3.10 Open Ramseys World and start a new sentence file. Type the following four sentences into the
file:
1. Between(a, b, c) Between(b, a, c)
2. FrontOf(a, b) FrontOf(c, b)
3. SameRow(b, c) LeftOf(b, a)
4. RightOf(b, a) Tet(a)
Assess each of these sentences in Ramseys World and check your assessment. Then make a single
change to the world that makes all four of the sentences come out false. Save the modified world
as World 3.10. Submit both files.
Section 3.4
Remarks about the game
Section 3.4
78 / The Boolean Connectives
Replace P
P either by P and
switch
commitment.
P P, then you know that it is true, no matter how the world is. After all,
if P is not true, then P will be true, and vice versa; in either event P P
will be true. But if P is quite complex, or if you have imperfect information
about the world, you may not know which of P or P is true. Suppose P
is a sentence like There is a whale swimming below the Golden Gate Bridge
right now. In such a case you would be willing to commit to the truth of the
disjunction (since either there is or there isnt) without knowing just how to
play the game and win. You know that there is a winning strategy for the
game, but just dont know what it is.
Since there is a moral imperative to live up to ones commitments, the
use of the term commitment in describing the game is a bit misleading.
You are perfectly justified in asserting the truth of P P, even if you do
not happen to know your winning strategy for playing the game. Indeed, it
would be foolish to claim that the sentence is not true. But if you do claim
that P P is true, and then play the game, you will be asked to say which
of P or P you think is true. With Tarskis World, unlike in real life, you can
always get complete information about the world by going to the 2D view,
and so always live up to such commitments.
Chapter 3
Ambiguity and parentheses / 79
Exercises
Here is a problem that illustrates the remarks we made about sometimes being able to tell that a sentence
is true, without knowing how to win the game.
3.11 Make sure Tarskis World is set to display the world in 3D. Then open Kleenes World and
. Kleenes Sentences. Some objects are hidden behind other objects, thus making it impossible
to assess the truth of some of the sentences. Each of the six names a, b, c, d, e, and f are in use,
naming some object. Now even though you cannot see all the objects, some of the sentences in
the list can be evaluated with just the information at hand. Assess the truth of each claim, if
you can, without recourse to the 2-D view. Then play the game. If your initial commitment is
right, but you lose the game, back up and play over again. Then go through and add comments
to each sentence explaining whether you can assess its truth in the world as shown, and why.
Finally, display the 2-D view and check your work. We have annotated the first sentence for you
to give you the idea. (The semicolon ; tells Tarskis World that what follows is a comment.)
When you are done, print out your annotated sentences to turn in to your instructor.
Section 3.5
Ambiguity and parentheses
When we first described fol, we stressed the lack of ambiguity of this language
as opposed to ordinary languages. For example, English allows us to say things
like Max is home or Claire is home and Carl is happy. This sentence can be
understood in two quite dierent ways. One reading claims that either Claire
is home and Carl is happy, or Max is home. On this reading, the sentence
would be true if Max was home, even if Carl was unhappy. The other reading
claims both that Max or Claire is home and that Carl is happy.
Fol avoids this sort of ambiguity by requiring the use of parentheses, much
the way they are used in algebra. So, for example, fol would not have one
sentence corresponding to the ambiguous English sentence, but two:
Home(max) (Home(claire) Happy(carl))
(Home(max) Home(claire)) Happy(carl)
The parentheses in the first indicate that it is a disjunction, whose second
disjunct is itself a conjunction. In the second, they indicate that the sentence
is a conjunction whose first conjunct is a disjunction. As a result, the truth
conditions for the two are quite dierent. This is analogous to the dierence
in algebra between the expressions 2 + (x 3) and (2 + x) 3. This analogy
between logic and algebra is one we will come back to later.
Section 3.5
80 / The Boolean Connectives
scope of negation Parentheses are also used to indicate the scope of a negation symbol
when it appears in a complex sentence. So, for example, the two sentences
Home(claire) Home(max)
(Home(claire) Home(max))
mean quite dierent things. The first is a conjunction of literals, the first of
which says Claire is not home, the second of which says that Max is home. By
contrast, the second sentence is a negation of a sentence which itself is a con-
junction: it says that they are not both home. You have already encountered
this use of parentheses in earlier exercises.
Many logic books require that you always put parentheses around any pair
of sentences joined by a binary connective (such as or ). These books do
not allow sentences of the form:
PQR
but instead require one of the following:
((P Q) R)
(P (Q R))
The version of fol that we use in this book is not so fussy, in a couple of ways.
leaving out parentheses First of all, it allows you to conjoin any number of sentences without using
parentheses, since the result is not ambiguous, and similarly for disjunctions.
Second, it allows you to leave o the outermost parentheses, since they serve
no useful purpose. You can also add extra parentheses (or brackets or braces)
if you want to for the sake of readability. For the most part, all we will require
is that your expression be unambiguous.
Remember
You try it
................................................................
1. Lets try our hand at evaluating some sentences built up from atomic
sentences using all three connectives , , . Open Booles Sentences and
Wittgensteins World. If you changed the size or shape of f while doing
Exercises 3.6 and 3.9, make sure that you change it back to a large tetra-
hedron.
Chapter 3
Ambiguity and parentheses / 81
2. Evaluate each sentence in the file and check your assessment. If your as-
sessment is wrong, play the game to see why. Dont go from one sentence
to the next until you understand why it has the truth value it does.
3. Do you see the importance of parentheses? After you understand all the
sentences, go back and see which of the false sentences you can make true
just by adding, deleting, or moving parentheses, but without making any
other changes. Save your file as Sentences Ambiguity 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Exercises
To really master a new language, you have to use it, not just read about it. The exercises and problems
that follow are intended to let you do just that.
3.12 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Sentences
Ambiguity 1.
3.13 (Building a world) Open Schroders Sentences. Build a single world where all the sentences
in this file are true. As you work through the sentences, you will find yourself successively
modifying the world. Whenever you make a change in the world, be careful that you dont
make one of your earlier sentences false. When you are finished, verify that all the sentences
are really true. Submit your world as World 3.13.
3.14 (Parentheses) Show that the sentence 3.15 (More parentheses) Show that
(Small(a) Small(b)) Cube(a) (Cube(b) Cube(c))
You will do this by submitting a coun- You will do this by submitting a coun-
terexample world in which the second terexample world in which the second
sentence is true but the first sentence is sentence is true but the first sentence is
false. false.
3.16 (DeMorgan Equivalences) Open the file DeMorgans Sentences. Construct a world where all the
odd numbered sentences are true. Notice that no matter how you do this, the even numbered
sentences also come out true. Submit this as World 3.16.1. Next build a world where all the
odd numbered sentences are false. Notice that no matter how you do it, the even numbered
sentences also come out false. Submit this as World 3.16.2.
Section 3.5
82 / The Boolean Connectives
3.17 In Exercise 3.16, you noticed an important fact about the relation between the even and odd
. numbered sentences in DeMorgans Sentences. Try to explain why each even numbered sentence
always has the same truth value as the odd numbered sentence that precedes it.
Section 3.6
Equivalent ways of saying things
Every language has many ways of saying the same thing. This is particularly
true of English, which has absorbed a remarkable number of words from other
languages in the course of its history. But in any language, speakers always
have a choice of many synonymous ways of getting across their point. The
world would be a boring place if there were just one way to make a given
claim.
Fol is no exception, even though it is far less rich in its expressive capaci-
ties than English. In the blocks language, for example, none of our predicates
is synonymous with another predicate, though it is obvious that we could
do without many of them without cutting down on the claims expressible in
the language. For instance, we could get by without the predicate RightOf by
expressing everything we need to say in terms of the predicate LeftOf, sys-
tematically reversing the order of the names to get equivalent claims. This is
not to say that RightOf means the same thing as LeftOfit obviously does
notbut just that the blocks language oers us a simple way to construct
equivalent claims using these predicates. In the exercises at the end of this
section, we explore a number of equivalences made possible by the predicates
of the blocks language.
Some versions of fol are more parsimonious with their basic predicates
than the blocks language, and so may not provide equivalent ways of express-
ing atomic claims. But even these languages cannot avoid multiple ways of
expressing more complex claims. For example, P Q and Q P express the
same claim in any first-order language. More interesting, because of the su-
perficial dierences in form, are the equivalences illustrated in Exercise 3.16,
DeMorgans laws known as DeMorgans laws. The first of DeMorgans laws tells us that the
negation of a conjunction, (P Q), is logically equivalent to the disjunction
of the negations of the original conjuncts: P Q. The other tells us that
the negation of a disjunction, (P Q), is equivalent to the conjunction of
the negations of the original disjuncts: P Q. These laws are simple con-
sequences of the meanings of the Boolean connectives. Writing S1 S2 to
indicate that S1 and S2 are logically equivalent, we can express DeMorgans
Chapter 3
Equivalent ways of saying things / 83
(P Q) (P Q)
(P Q) (P Q)
There are many other equivalences that arise from the meanings of the
Boolean connectives. Perhaps the simplest is known as the principle of double double negation
negation. Double negation says that a sentence of the form P is equivalent
to the sentence P. We will systematically discuss these and other equiva-
lences in the next chapter. In the meantime, we simply note these important
equivalences before going on. Recognizing that there is more than one way of
expressing a claim is essential before we tackle complicated claims involving
the Boolean connectives.
Remember
1. Double negation: P P
2. DeMorgan: (P Q) (P Q)
3. DeMorgan: (P Q) (P Q)
Exercises
3.18 (Equivalences in the blocks language) In the blocks language used in Tarskis World there are
a number of equivalent ways of expressing some of the predicates. Open Bernays Sentences.
You will find a list of atomic sentences, where every other sentence is left blank. In each blank,
write a sentence that is equivalent to the sentence above it, but does not use the predicate
used in that sentence. (In doing this, you may presuppose any general facts about Tarskis
World, for example that blocks come in only three shapes.) If your answers are correct, the odd
numbered sentences will have the same truth values as the even numbered sentences in every
world. Check that they do in Ackermanns World, Bolzanos World, Booles World, and Leibnizs
World. Submit the modified sentence file as Sentences 3.18.
3.19 (Equivalences in English) There are also equivalent ways of expressing predicates in English.
. For each of the following sentences of fol, find an atomic sentence in English that expresses
the same thing. For example, the sentence Man(max) Married(max) could be expressed in
Section 3.6
84 / The Boolean Connectives
Section 3.7
Translation
An important skill that you will want to master is that of translating from
English to fol, and vice versa. But before you can do that, you need to know
how to express yourself in both languages. The problems below are designed
to help you learn these related skills.
correct translation How do we know if a translation is correct? Intuitively, a correct translation
is a sentence with the same meaning as the one being translated. But what
is the meaning? Fol finesses this question, settling for truth conditions.
What we require of a correct translation in fol is that it be true in the same
circumstances as the original sentence. If two sentences are true in exactly
truth conditions the same circumstances, we say that they have the same truth conditions. For
sentences of Tarskis World, this boils down to being true in the very same
worlds.
Note that it is not sucient that the two sentences have the same truth
value in some particular world. If that were so, then any true sentence of
English could be translated by any true sentence of fol. So, for example,
if Claire and Max are both at home, we could translate Max is at home by
means of Home(claire). No, having the same actual truth value is not enough.
They have to have the same truth values in all circumstances.
Remember
Chapter 3
Translation / 85
In general, this is all we require of translations into and out of fol. Thus,
given an English sentence S and a good fol translation of it, say S, any other
sentence S that is equivalent to S will also count as an acceptable translation
of it, since S and S have the same truth conditions. But there is a matter of
style. Some good translations are better than others. You want sentences that
are easy to understand. But you also want to keep the fol connectives close
to the English, if possible.
For example, a good translation of It is not true that Claire and Max are
both at home would be given by
(Home(claire) Home(max))
This is equivalent to the following sentence (by the first DeMorgan law), so
we count it too as an acceptable translation:
Home(claire) Home(max)
But there is a clear stylistic sense in which the first is a better translation, since
it conforms more closely to the form of the original. There are no hard and
fast rules for determining which among several logically equivalent sentences
is the best translation of a given sentence.
Many stylistic features of English have nothing to do with the truth con-
ditions of a sentence, and simply cant be captured in an fol translation. For
example, consider the English sentence Pris is hungry but Carl is not. This
sentence tells us two things, that Pris is hungry and that Carl is not hungry.
So it would be translated into fol as
Hungry(pris) Hungry(carl)
When it comes to truth conditions, but expresses the same truth function
as and. Yet it is clear that but carries an additional suggestion that and does but, however, yet,
not, namely, that the listener may find the sentence following the but a bit sur- nonetheless
prising, given the expectations raised by the sentence preceding it. The words
but, however, yet, nonetheless, and so forth, all express ordinary conjunction,
and so are translated into fol using . The fact that they also communicate
a sense of unexpectedness is just lost in the translation. Fol, as much as we
love it, sometimes sacrifices style for clarity.
In Exercise 3.21, sentences 1, 8, and 10, you will discover an important
function that the English phrases either. . . or and both. . . and sometimes play. either. . . or, both. . . and
Either helps disambiguate the following or by indicating how far to the left
its scope extends; similarly both indicates how far to the left the following
and extends. For example, Either Max is home and Claire is home or Carl
Section 3.7
86 / The Boolean Connectives
In other words, either and both can sometimes act as left parentheses act in
fol. The same list of sentences demonstrates many other uses of either and
both.
Remember
3. The English expressions either and both are often used like parentheses
to clarify an otherwise ambiguous sentence.
Exercises
3.20 (Describing a simple world) Open Booles World. Start a new sentence file, named Sen-
tences 3.20, where you will describe some features of this world. Check each of your sentences
to see that it is indeed a sentence and that it is true in this world.
1. Notice that f (the large dodecahedron in the back) is not in front of a. Use your first
sentence to say this.
2. Notice that f is to the right of a and to the left of b. Use your second sentence to say
this.
3. Use your third sentence to say that f is either in back of or smaller than a.
4. Express the fact that both e and d are between c and a.
5. Note that neither e nor d is larger than c. Use your fifth sentence to say this.
6. Notice that e is neither larger than nor smaller than d. Use your sixth sentence to say
this.
7. Notice that c is smaller than a but larger than e. State this fact.
8. Note that c is in front of f ; moreover, it is smaller than f . Use your eighth sentence
to state these things.
Chapter 3
Translation / 87
9. Notice that b is in the same row as a but is not in the same column as f . Use your
ninth sentence to express this fact.
10. Notice that e is not in the same column as either c or d. Use your tenth sentence to
state this.
Now lets change the world so that none of the above mentioned facts hold. We can do this as
follows. First move f to the front right corner of the grid. (Be careful not to drop it o the
edge. You might find it easier to make the move from the 2-D view. If you accidentally drop
it, just open Booles World again.) Then move e to the back left corner of the grid and make
it large. Now none of the facts hold; if your answers to 110 are correct, all of the sentences
should now be false. Verify that they are. If any are still true, can you figure out where you went
wrong? Submit your sentences when you think they are correct. There is no need to submit
the modified world file.
3.21 (Some translations) Tarskis World provides you with a very useful way to check whether your
translation of a given English sentence is correct. If it is correct, then it will always have the
same truth value as the English sentence, no matter what world the two are evaluated in. So
when you are in doubt about one of your translations, simply build some worlds where the
English sentence is true, others where it is false, and check to see that your translation has
the right truth values in these worlds. You should use this technique frequently in all of the
translation exercises.
Start a new sentence file, and use it to enter translations of the following English sentences
into first-order logic. You will only need to use the connectives , , and .
1. Either a is small or both c and d are large.
2. d and e are both in back of b.
3. d and e are both in back of b and larger than it.
4. Both d and c are cubes, however neither of them is small.
5. Neither e nor a is to the right of c and to the left of b.
6. Either e is not large or it is in back of a.
7. c is neither between a and b, nor in front of either of them.
8. Either both a and e are tetrahedra or both a and f are.
9. Neither d nor c is in front of either c or b.
10. c is either between d and f or smaller than both of them.
11. It is not the case that b is in the same row as c.
12. b is in the same column as e, which is in the same row as d, which in turn is in the
same column as a.
Section 3.7
88 / The Boolean Connectives
3.22 (Checking your translations) Open Wittgensteins World. Notice that all of the English sentences
from Exercise 3.21 are true in this world. Thus, if your translations are accurate, they will also
be true in this world. Check to see that they are. If you made any mistakes, go back and fix
them. But as we have stressed, even if one of your sentences comes out true in Wittgensteins
World, it does not mean that it is a proper translation of the corresponding English sentence.
All you know for sure is that your translation and the original sentence have the same truth
value in this particular world. If the translation is correct, it will have the same truth value as
the English sentence in every world. Thus, to have a better test of your translations, we will
examine them in a number of worlds, to see if they have the same truth values as their English
counterparts in all of these worlds.
Lets start by making modifications to Wittgensteins World. Make all the large or medium
objects small, and the small objects large. With these changes in the world, the English sen-
tences 1, 3, 4, and 10 become false, while the rest remain true. Verify that the same holds for
your translations. If not, correct your translations. Next, rotate your modified Wittgensteins
World 90 clockwise. Now sentences 5, 6, 8, 9, and 11 should be the only true ones that remain.
Lets check your translations in another world. Open Booles World. The only English sen-
tences that are true in this world are sentences 6 and 11. Verify that all of your translations
except 6 and 11 are false. If not, correct your translations.
Now modify Booles World by exchanging the positions of b and c. With this change, the
English sentences 2, 5, 6, 7, and 11 come out true, while the rest are false. Check that the same
is true of your translations.
There is nothing to submit except Sentences 3.21.
3.23 Start a new sentence file and translate the following into fol. Use the names and predicates
presented in Table 1.2 on page 30.
1. Max is a student, not a pet.
2. Claire fed Folly at 2 pm and then ten minutes later gave her to Max.
3. Folly belonged to either Max or Claire at 2:05 pm.
4. Neither Max nor Claire fed Folly at 2 pm or at 2:05 pm.
5. 2:00 pm is between 1:55 pm and 2:05 pm.
6. When Max gave Folly to Claire at 2 pm, Folly wasnt hungry, but she was an hour
later.
3.24 Referring again to Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following into natural, colloquial English.
. Turn in your translations to your instructor.
1. Student(claire) Student(max)
2. Pet(pris) Owned(max, pris, 2:00)
3. Owned(claire, pris, 2:00) Owned(claire, folly, 2:00)
4. (Fed(max, pris, 2:00) Fed(max, folly, 2:00))
Chapter 3
Translation / 89
3.25 Translate the following into fol, introducing names, predicates, and function symbols as
. needed. Explain the meaning of each predicate and function symbol, unless it is completely
obvious.
1. AIDS is less contagious than influenza, but more deadly.
2. Abe fooled Stephen on Sunday, but not on Monday.
3. Sean or Brad admires Meryl and Harrison.
4. Daisy is a jolly miller, and lives on the River Dee.
5. Poloniuss eldest child was neither a borrower nor a lender.
3.26 (Boolean solids) Many of you know how to do a Boolean search on the Web or on your
. computer. When we do a Boolean search, we are really using a generalization of the Boolean
truth functions. We specify a Boolean combination of words as a criterion for finding documents
that contain (or do not contain) those words. Another generalization of the Boolean operations
is to spatial objects. In Figure 3.1 we show four ways to combine a vertical cylinder (A) with a
horizontal cylinder (B) to yield a new solid. Give an intuitive explanation of how the Boolean
connectives are being applied in this example. Then describe what the object (A B) would
be like and explain why we didnt give you a picture of this solid.
Section 3.7
90 / The Boolean Connectives
Section 3.8
Alternative notation
Alternatives to parentheses
There are ways to get around the use of parentheses in fol. At one time, a
dot notation common alternative to parentheses was a system known as dot notation. This
system involved placing little dots next to connectives indicating their relative
power or scope. In this system, the two sentences we write as P (Q R)
and (P Q) R would have been written P . Q R and P Q . R, respec-
tively. With more complex sentences, multiple dots were used. Fortunately,
this notation has just about died out, and the present authors never speak to
anyone who uses it.
Polish notation Another approach to parentheses is known as Polish notation. In Polish
notation, the usual infix notation is replaced by prefix notation, and this
Chapter 3
Alternative notation / 91
ApKNqr
Since this expression starts with A, we know right away that it is a disjunction.
What follows must be its two disjuncts, in sequence. So the first disjunct is p
and the second is KNqr, that is, the conjunction of the negation of q and of r.
So this is the Polish version of
P (Q R)
Though Polish notation may look hard to read, many of you have already
mastered a version of it. Calculators use two styles for entering formulas. One
is known as algebraic style, the other as RPN style. The RPN stands for reverse Polish notation
reverse Polish notation. If you have a calculator that uses RPN, then to
calculate the value of, say, (7 8) + 3 you enter things in this order: 7, 8, ,
3, +. This is just the reverse of the Polish, or prefix, ordering.
In order for Polish notation to work without parentheses, the connectives
must all have a fixed arity. If we allowed conjunction to take an arbitrary num-
ber of sentences as arguments, rather than requiring exactly two, a sentence
like KpNKqrs would be ambiguous. It could either mean P (Q R) S or
P (Q R S), and these arent equivalent.
Remember
Section 3.8
92 / The Boolean Connectives
Exercises
3.27 (Overcoming dialect dierences) The 3.28 (Translating from Polish) Try your hand
following are all sentences of fol. But at translating the following sentences
theyre in dierent dialects. Submit a from Polish notation into our dialect.
sentence file in which youve translated Submit the resulting sentence file.
them into our dialect. 1. NKpq
1. P&Q 2. KNpq
2. !(P (Q&&P)) 3. NAKpqArs
3. ( P Q) P 4. NAKpAqrs
4. P( Q RS) 5. NAKApqrs
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
93
94 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Section 4.1
Tautologies and logical truth
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 95
Section 4.1
96 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
column splits each of these, marking the first and third quarters of the rows
with true, the second and fourth quarters with false, and so on. This will
result in the last column having true and false alternating down the column.
Lets start by looking at a very simple example of a truth table, one for the
sentence Cube(a) Cube(a). Since this sentence is built up from one atomic
sentence, our truth table will contain two rows, one for the case where Cube(a)
is true and one for when it is false.
In a truth table, the column or columns under the atomic sentences are
reference columns called reference columns. Once the reference columns have been filled in, we
are ready to fill in the remainder of the table. To do this, we construct columns
of Ts and Fs beneath each connective of the target sentence S. These columns
are filled in one by one, using the truth tables for the various connectives. We
start by working on connectives that apply only to atomic sentences. Once
this is done, we work on connectives that apply to sentences whose main
connective has already had its column filled in. We continue this process until
the main connective of S has had its column filled in. This is the column that
shows how the truth of S depends on the truth of its atomic parts.
Our first step in filling in this truth table, then, is to calculate the truth
values that should go in the column under the innermost connective, which in
this case is the . We do this by referring to the truth values in the reference
column under Cube(a), switching values in accord with the meaning of .
Once this column is filled in, we can determine the truth values that should
go under the by looking at the values under Cube(a) and those under the
negation sign, since these correspond to the values of the two disjuncts to
which is applied. (Do you understand this?) Since there is at least one T in
each row, the final column of the truth table looks like this.
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 97
Not surprisingly, our table tells us that the sentence Cube(a) Cube(a)
cannot be false. It is what we will call a tautology, an especially simple kind
of logical truth. We will give a precise definition of tautologies later. Our
sentence is in fact an instance of a principle, P P, that is known as the law law of excluded middle
of the excluded middle. Every instance of this principle is a tautology.
Lets next look at a more complex truth table, one for a sentence built up
from three atomic sentences.
(Cube(a) Cube(b)) Cube(c)
In order to make our table easier to read, we will abbreviate the atomic
sentences by A, B, and C. Since there are three atomic sentences, our table
will have eight (23 ) rows. Look carefully at how weve arranged the Ts and
Fs and convince yourself that every possible assignment is represented by one
of the rows.
A B C (A B) C
T T T
T T F
T F T
T F F
F T T
F T F
F F T
F F F
Since two of the connectives in the target sentence apply to atomic sen-
tences whose values are specified in the reference column, we can fill in these
columns using the truth tables for and given earlier.
A B C (A B) C
t t t T F
t t f T T
t f t F F
t f f F T
f t t F F
f t f F T
f f t F F
f f f F T
This leaves only one connective, the main connective of the sentence. We fill
in the column under it by referring to the two columns just completed, using
the truth table for .
Section 4.1
98 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
A B C (A B) C
t t t t T f
t t f t T t
t f t f F f
t f f f T t
f t t f F f
f t f f T t
f f t f F f
f f f f T t
When we inspect the final column of this table, the one beneath the con-
nective , we see that the sentence will be false in any circumstance where
Cube(c) is true and one of Cube(a) or Cube(b) is false. This table shows that
our sentence is not a tautology. Furthermore, since there clearly are blocks
worlds in which c is a cube and either a or b is not, the claim made by our
original sentence is not logically necessary.
Lets look at one more example, this time for a sentence of the form
(A (A (B C))) B
This sentence, though it has the same number of atomic constituents, is con-
siderably more complex than our previous example. We begin the truth table
by filling in the columns under the two connectives that apply directly to
atomic sentences.
A B C (A (A (B C))) B
t t t F T
t t f F F
t f t F F
t f f F F
f t t T T
f t f T F
f f t T F
f f f T F
We can now fill in the column under the that connects A and B C by
referring to the columns just filled in. This column will have an F in it if and
only if both of the constituents are false.
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 99
A B C (A (A (B C))) B
t t t f T t
t t f f F f
t f t f F f
t f f f F f
f t t t T t
f t f t T f
f f t t T f
f f f t T f
A B C (A (A (B C))) B
t t t T f t t
t t f F f f f
t f t F f f f
t f f F f f f
f t t F t t t
f t f F t t f
f f t F t t f
f f f F t t f
We can now fill in the column for the remaining by referring to the previously
completed column. The simply reverses Ts and Fs.
A B C (A (A (B C))) B
t t t F t f t t
t t f T f f f f
t f t T f f f f
t f f T f f f f
f t t T f t t t
f t f T f t t f
f f t T f t t f
f f f T f t t f
Finally, we can fill in the column under the main connective of our sentence.
We do this with the two-finger method: running our fingers down the reference
column for B and the just completed column, entering T whenever at least
one finger points to a T.
Section 4.1
100 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
A B C (A (A (B C))) B
t t t f t f t t T
t t f t f f f f T
t f t t f f f f T
t f f t f f f f T
f t t t f t t t T
f t f t f t t f T
f f t t f t t f T
f f f t f t t f T
tautology We will say that a tautology is any sentence whose truth table has only Ts
in the column under its main connective. Thus, we see from the final column
of the above table that any sentence of the form
(A (A (B C))) B
is a tautology.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the program Boole from the software that came with the book. We
will use Boole to reconstruct the truth table just discussed. The first thing
to do is enter the sentence (A (A (B C))) B at the top, right of
the table. To do this, use the toolbar to enter the logical symbols and
the keyboard to type the letters A, B, and C. (You can also enter the
logical symbols from the keyboard by typing &, |, and for , , and ,
respectively. If you enter the logical symbols from the keyboard, make sure
you add spaces before and after the binary connectives so that the columns
under them will be reasonably spaced out.) If your sentence is ill-formed,
part of the sentence will be displayed in red. The point at which the color
changes is Booles best guess about where the error is.
2. To build the reference columns, click in the top left portion of the table to
move your insertion point to the top of the first reference column. Enter C
in this column. Then choose Add Column Before from the Table menu
and enter B. Repeat this procedure and add a column headed by A. To fill
in the reference columns, click under each of them in turn, and type the
desired pattern of Ts and Fs.
3. Click under the various connectives in the target sentence, and notice that
green squares appear in the columns whose values the connective depends
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 101
upon. Select a column so that the highlighted columns are already filled
in, and fill in that column with the appropriate truth values. Continue this
process until your table is complete. When you are done use the Verify
item from the Table menu to see if all the values are correct and your
table complete. You can also verify your table using the colored button
on the toolbar (just to the left of the print button). If you have filled the
table correctly, green check marks should appear to the left of each row,
and next to the target sentence. Red crosses indicate that you have made
a mistake, and you should fix these now.
4. Once you have a correct and complete truth table, click on the Assess-
ment button in the pink area under the toolbar. This will allow you to
say whether you think the sentence is a tautology. Say that it is (since it
is), and check your assessment by again selecting Verify from the Table
menu (or by using the toolbar button). You should now see a green check
mark next to the word Tautology on the assessment panel. Save your
table as Table Tautology 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
There is a slight problem with our definition of a tautology, in that it
assumes that every sentence has a main connective. This is almost always the
case, but not in sentences like: main connectives
PQR
For purposes of constructing truth tables, we will assume that the main con-
nective in conjunctions with more than two conjuncts is always the rightmost
. That is to say, we will construct a truth table for P Q R the same way
we would construct a truth table for:
(P Q) R
More generally, we construct the truth table for:
P1 P2 P3 . . . Pn
as if it were punctuated like this:
(((P1 P2 ) P3 ) . . .) Pn
We treat long disjunctions similarly.
Any tautology is logically necessary. After all, its truth is guaranteed sim- tautologies and logical
ply by its structure and the meanings of the truth-functional connectives. necessity
Tautologies are logical necessities in a very strong sense. Their truth is inde-
pendent of both the way the world happens to be and even the meanings of
the atomic sentences out of which they are composed.
Section 4.1
102 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
It should be clear, however, that not all logically necessary claims are
tautologies. The simplest example of a logically necessary claim that is not
a tautology is the fol sentence a = a. Since this is an atomic sentence, its
truth table would contain one T and one F. The truth table method is too
coarse to recognize that the row containing the F does not represent a genuine
possibility.
(a) Larger(a, b)
C ube
Cube(a) Dode
(a) c(a
Te t Medium(b) La )
l l(b) r ge
a (b)
Sm
)
r(a, b Larger(
a rge b = b b, a
(L a
a=
))
) Tet Tautologies
t(a
(a)
Te
Logical Necessities
Tarskis World
Necessities
Figure 4.1: The relation between tautologies, logical truths, and tw-
necessities.
You should be able to think of any number of sentences that are not
tautological, but which nonetheless seem logically necessary. For example, the
sentence
cannot possibly be false, yet a truth table for the sentence will not show this.
The sentence will be false in the row of the truth table that assigns T to both
Larger(a, b) and Larger(b, a).
We now have two methods for exploring the notions of logical possibility
and necessity, at least for the blocks language. First, there are the blocks
worlds that can be constructed using Tarskis World. If a sentence is true in
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 103
Remember
1. S is a tautology if and only if every row of the truth table assigns true
to S.
4. S is tt-possible if and only if at least one row of the truth table assigns
true to S.
Section 4.1
104 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Exercises
In this chapter, you will often be using Boole to construct truth tables. Although Boole has the capability
of building and filling in reference columns for you, do not use this feature. To understand truth tables,
you need to be able to do this yourself. In later chapters, we will let you use the feature, once youve
learned how to do it yourself. The Grade Grinder will, by the way, be able to tell if Boole constructed
the reference columns.
4.1 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Table Tautology 1.
4.2 Assume that A, B, and C are atomic sentences. Use Boole to construct truth tables for each of
the following sentences and, based on your truth tables, say which are tautologies. Name your
tables Table 4.2.x, where x is the number of the sentence.
1. (A B) (A B)
2. (A B) (A B)
3. (A B) C
4. (A B) (A (B C))
4.3 In Exercise 4.2 you should have discovered that two of the four sentences are tautologies, and
. hence logical truths.
1. Suppose you are told that the atomic sentence A is in fact a logical truth (for example,
a = a). Can you determine whether any additional sentences in the list (1)-(4) are
logically necessary based on this information?
2. Suppose you are told that A is in fact a logically false sentence (for example, a = a).
Can you determine whether any additional sentences in the list (1)-(4) are logical
truths based on this information?
In the following four exercises, use Boole to construct truth tables and indicate whether the sentence
is tt-possible and whether it is a tautology. Remember how you should treat long conjunctions and
disjunctions.
4.4 (B C B) 4.5 A (B (C A))
4.6 [A (B C) (A B)] 4.7 [(A B) (C D)]
4.8 Make a copy of the Euler circle diagram on page 102 and place the numbers of the following
. sentences in the appropriate region.
1. a = b
2. a = b b = b
Chapter 4
Tautologies and logical truth / 105
3. a=bb=b
4. (Large(a) Large(b) Adjoins(a, b))
5. Larger(a, b) Larger(a, b)
6. Larger(a, b) Smaller(a, b)
7. Tet(a) Cube(b) a = b
8. (Small(a) Small(b)) Small(a)
9. SameSize(a, b) (Small(a) Small(b))
10. (SameCol(a, b) SameRow(a, b))
4.9 (Logical dependencies) Use Tarskis World to open Weiners Sentences.
|. 1. For each of the ten sentences in this file, construct a truth table in Boole and assess
whether the sentence is tt-possible. Name your tables Table 4.9.x, where x is the
number of the sentence in question. Use the results to fill in the first column of the
following table:
2. In the second column of the table, put yes if you think the sentence is tw-possible,
that is, if it is possible to make the sentence true by building a world in Tarskis World,
and no otherwise. For each sentence that you mark tw-possible, actually build a world
in which it is true and name it World 4.9.x, where x is the number of the sentence in
question. The truth tables you constructed before may help you build these worlds.
3. Are any of the sentences tt-possible but not tw-possible? Explain why this can hap-
pen. Are any of the sentences tw-possible but not tt-possible? Explain why not.
Submit the files you created and turn in the table and explanations to your instructor.
4.10 Draw an Euler circle diagram similar to the diagram on page 102, but this time showing the
. relationship between the notions of logical possibility, tw-possibility, and tt-possibility. For
each region in the diagram, indicate an example sentence that would fall in that region. Dont
forget the region that falls outside all the circles.
All necessary truths are obviously possible: since they are true in all possible circumstances,
they are surely true in some possible circumstances. Given this reflection, where would the
sentences from our previous diagram on page 102 fit into the new diagram?
4.11 Suppose that S is a tautology, with atomic sentences A, B, and C. Suppose that we replace
. all occurrences of A by another sentence P, possibly complex. Explain why the resulting sentence
Section 4.1
106 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Section 4.2
Logical and tautological equivalence
In the last chapter, we introduced the notion of logically equivalent sentences,
sentences that have the same truth values in every possible circumstance.
When two sentences are logically equivalent, we also say they have the same
truth conditions, since the conditions under which they come out true or false
are identical.
The notion of logical equivalence, like logical necessity, is somewhat vague,
logical equivalence but not in a way that prevents us from studying it with precision. For here too
we can introduce precise concepts that bear a clear relationship to the intuitive
notion we aim to understand better. The key concept we will introduce in this
tautological equivalence section is that of tautological equivalence. Two sentences are tautologically
equivalent if they can be seen to be equivalent simply in virtue of the meanings
of the truth-functional connectives. As you might expect, we can check for
tautological equivalence using truth tables.
Suppose we have two sentences, S and S , that we want to check for tau-
tological equivalence. What we do is construct a truth table with a reference
column for each of the atomic sentences that appear in either of the two sen-
tences. To the right, we write both S and S , with a vertical line separating
them, and fill in the truth values under the connectives as usual. We call this
joint truth tables a joint truth table for the sentences S and S . When the joint truth table is
completed, we compare the column under the main connective of S with the
column under the main connective of S . If these columns are identical, then
we know that the truth conditions of the two sentences are the same.
Lets look at an example. Using A and B to stand for arbitrary atomic
sentences, let us test the first DeMorgan law for tautological equivalence. We
would do this by means of the following joint truth table.
A B (A B) A B
t t F t f F f
t f T f f T t
f t T f t T f
f f T f t T t
In this table, the columns in bold correspond to the main connectives of the
Chapter 4
Logical and tautological equivalence / 107
two sentences. Since these columns are identical, we know that the sentences
must have the same truth values, no matter what the truth values of their
atomic constituents may be. This holds simply in virtue of the structure of
the two sentences and the meanings of the Boolean connectives. So, the two
sentences are indeed tautologically equivalent.
Lets look at a second example, this time to see whether the sentence
((A B) C) is tautologically equivalent to (A B) C. To construct a
truth table for this pair of sentences, we will need eight rows, since there are
three atomic sentences. The completed table looks like this.
A B C ((A B) C) (A B) C
t t t T t f f f f f T
t t f F t t t f f f F
t f t T t f f f f t T
t f f F t t t f f t F
f t t T t f f t f f T
f t f F t t t t f f F
f f t T f f f t t t T
f f f T f f t t t t T
Once again, scanning the final columns under the two main connectives reveals
that the sentences are tautologically equivalent, and hence logically equivalent.
All tautologically equivalent sentences are logically equivalent, but the
reverse does not in general hold. Indeed, the relationship between these no- tautological vs. logical
tions is the same as that between tautologies and logical truths. Tautological equivalence
equivalence is a strict form of logical equivalence, one that wont apply to
some logically equivalent pairs of sentences. Consider the pair of sentences:
a = b Cube(a)
a = b Cube(b)
Section 4.2
108 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
This proof shows that these two sentences have the same truth values in
any possible circumstance. For if one were true and the other false, this would
contradict the conclusion of one of the two parts of the proof. But consider
number of rows in what happens when we construct a joint truth table for these sentences. Three
joint table atomic sentences appear in the pair of sentences, so the joint table will look
like this. (Notice that the ordinary truth table for either of the sentences alone
would have only four rows, but that the joint table must have eight. Do you
understand why?)
This table shows that the two sentences are not tautologically equivalent,
since it assigns the sentences dierent values in the second and third rows.
Look closely at those two rows to see whats going on. Notice that in both
of these rows, a = b is assigned T while Cube(a) and Cube(b) are assigned
dierent truth values. Of course, we know that neither of these rows corre-
sponds to a logically possible circumstance, since if a and b are identical, the
truth values of Cube(a) and Cube(b) must be the same. But the truth table
method doesnt detect this, since it is sensitive only to the meanings of the
truth-functional connectives.
As we expand our language to include quantifiers, we will find many logical
equivalences that are not tautological equivalences. But this is not to say
there arent a lot of important and interesting tautological equivalences. Weve
already highlighted three in the last chapter: double negation and the two
DeMorgan equivalences. We leave it to you to check that these principles are,
in fact, tautological equivalences. In the next section, we will introduce other
principles and see how they can be used to simplify sentences of fol.
Chapter 4
Logical and tautological equivalence / 109
Remember
Exercises
In Exercises 4.12-4.18, use Boole to construct joint truth tables showing that the pairs of sentences are
logically (indeed, tautologically) equivalent. To add a second sentence to your joint truth table, choose
Add Column After from the Table menu. Dont forget to specify your assessments, and remember,
you should build and fill in your own reference columns.
4.12 (DeMorgan)
(A B) and A B
4.19 (tw-equivalence) Suppose we introduced the notion of tw-equivalence, saying that two sen-
. tences of the blocks language are tw-equivalent if and only if they have the same truth value
in every world that can be constructed in Tarskis World.
1. What is the relationship between tw-equivalence, tautological equivalence and logical
equivalence?
2. Give an example of a pair of sentences that are tw-equivalent but not logically equiv-
alent.
Section 4.2
110 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Section 4.3
Logical and tautological consequence
Our main concern in this book is with the logical consequence relation, of
which logical truth and logical equivalence can be thought of as very special
cases: A logical truth is a sentence that is a logical consequence of any set
of premises, and logically equivalent sentences are sentences that are logical
consequences of one another.
As youve probably guessed, truth tables allow us to define a precise notion
of tautological consequence, a strict form of logical consequence, just as they
allowed us to define tautologies and tautological equivalence, strict forms of
logical truth and logical equivalence.
Lets look at the simple case of two sentences, P and Q, both built from
atomic sentences by means of truth-functional connectives. Suppose you want
to know whether Q is a consequence of P. Create a joint truth table for P
and Q, just like you would if you were testing for tautological equivalence.
After you fill in the columns for P and Q, scan the columns under the main
connectives for these sentences. In particular, look at every row of the table in
tautological consequence which P is true. If each such row is also one in which Q is true, then Q is said
to be a tautological consequence of P. The truth table shows that if P is true,
then Q must be true as well, and that this holds simply due to the meanings
of the truth-functional connectives.
Just as tautologies are logically necessary, so too any tautological conse-
quence Q of a sentence P must also be a logical consequence of P. We can
see this by proving that if Q is not a logical consequence of P, then it cant
possibly pass our truth table test for tautological consequence.
Proof: Suppose Q is not a logical consequence of P. Then by our def-
inition of logical consequence, there must be a possible circumstance
in which P is true but Q is false. This circumstance will determine
truth values for the atomic sentences in P and Q, and these values
will correspond to a row in the joint truth table for P and Q, since
all possible assignments of truth values to the atomic sentences are
represented in the truth table. Further, since P and Q are built up
from the atomic sentences by truth-functional connectives, and since
the former is true in the original circumstance and the latter false,
P will be assigned T in this row and Q will be assigned F. Hence, Q
is not a tautological consequence of P.
Lets look at a very simple example. Suppose we wanted to check to see
whether A B is a consequence of A B. The joint truth table for these sen-
Chapter 4
Logical and tautological consequence / 111
Section 4.3
112 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
the right.)
A B AB A B
t t T F T
t f T F F
f t T T T
f f F T F
Scanning the columns under our two premises, A B and A, we see that
there is only one row where both premises come out true, namely the third.
And in the third row, the conclusion B also comes out true. So B is indeed a
tautological (and hence logical) consequence of these premises.
In both of the examples weve looked at so far, there has been only one
row in which the premises all came out true. This makes the arguments easy
to check for validity, but its not at all something you can count on. For
example, suppose we used the truth table method to check whether A C
is a consequence of A B and B C. The joint truth table for these three
sentences looks like this.
A B C A B BC AC
t t t T f T T
t t f T f T T
t f t T t T T
t f f T t F T
f t t F f T T
f t f F f T F
f f t T t T T
f f f T t F F
Here, there are four rows in which the premises, A B and B C, are
both true: the first, second, third, and seventh. But in each of these rows the
conclusion, A C, is also true. The conclusion is true in other rows as well, but
we dont care about that. This inference, from A B and B C to A C, is
logically valid, and is an instance of an important pattern known in computer
science as resolution.
We should look at an example where the truth table method reveals that
the conclusion is not a tautological consequence of the premises. Actually, the
last truth table will serve this purpose. For this table also shows that the
sentence A B is not a tautological consequence of the two premises B C
and A C. Can you find the row that shows this? (Hint: Its got to be the
first, second, third, fifth, or seventh, since these are the rows in which B C
and A C are both true.)
Chapter 4
Logical and tautological consequence / 113
Remember
Exercises
For each of the arguments below, use the truth table method to determine whether the conclusion is a
tautological consequence of the premises. Your truth table for Exercise 4.24 will be fairly large. Its good
for the soul to build a large truth table every once in a while. Be thankful you have Boole to help you.
(But make sure you build your own reference columns!)
4.22 Large(a)
Cube(a) Dodec(a)
(Cube(a) Large(a)) (Dodec(a) Large(a))
4.23 A B 4.24 A B C
BC C D
CD (B E)
A D D A E
4.25 Give an example of two dierent sentences A and B in the blocks language such that A B is
. a logical consequence of A B. [Hint: Note that A A is a logical consequence of A A, but
here we insist that A and B be distinct sentences.]
Section 4.3
114 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Section 4.4
Tautological consequence in Fitch
We hope you solved Exercise 4.24, because the solution gives you a sense
of both the power and the drawbacks of the truth table method. We were
tempted to ask you to construct a table requiring 64 rows, but thought better
of it. Constructing large truth tables may build character, but like most things
that build character, its a drag.
Checking to see if Q is a tautological consequence of P1 , . . . , Pn is a me-
chanical procedure. If the sentences are long it may require a lot of tedious
work, but it doesnt take any originality. This is just the sort of thing that
computers are good at. Because of this, we have built a mechanism into Fitch,
Taut Con mechanism called Taut Con, that is similar to Ana Con but checks to see whether a
sentence is a tautological consequence of the sentences cited in support. Like
Ana Con, Taut Con is not really an inference rule (we will introduce infer-
ence rules for the Boolean connectives in Chapter 6), but is useful for quickly
testing whether one sentence follows tautologically from others.
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Launch Fitch and open the file Taut Con 1. In this file you will find an
argument that has the same form as the argument in Exercise 4.23. (Ignore
the two goal sentences. Well get to them later.) Move the focus slider to
the last step of the proof. From the Rule? menu, go down to the Con
submenu and choose Taut Con.
2. Now cite the three premises as support for this sentence and check the
step. The step will not check out since this sentence is not a tautological
consequence of the premises, as you discovered if you did Exercise 4.23,
which has the same form as this inference.
3. Edit the step that did not check out to read:
Home(max) Home(carl)
Chapter 4
Tautological consequence in Fitch / 115
Use Taut Con to see if this sentence follows tautologically from the three
premises. Choose Verify Proof from the Proof menu. You will find that
although the step checks out, the goal does not. This is because we have
put a special constraint on your use of Taut Con in this exercise.
5. Choose View Goal Constraints from the Goal menu. You will find that
in this proof, you are allowed to use Taut Con, but can only cite two or
fewer support sentences when you use it. Close the goal window to get
back to the proof.
6. The sentence you entered also follows from the sentence immediately above
it plus just one of the three premises. Uncite the three premises and see
if you can get the step to check out citing just two sentences in support.
Once you succeed, verify the proof and save it as Proof Taut Con 1. Do
not close the proof, since it will be needed in the next You Try It.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
You are probably curious about the relationship between Taut Con and
Ana Conand for that matter, what the other mysterious item on the Con
menu, FO Con, might do. These are in fact three increasingly strong methods Taut Con, FO Con,
that Fitch uses to test for logical consequence. Taut Con is the weakest. It and Ana Con
checks to see whether the current step follows from the cited sentences in virtue
of the meanings of the truth-functional connectives. It ignores the meanings of
any predicates that appear in the sentence and, when we introduce quantifiers
into the language, it will ignore those as well.
To help you keep track of the information that Taut Con considers when
checking a step, Fitch has special goggles which obscure the information
that will not be considered when checking the step. As we said above, the
only things that matter when checking a step justified by Taut Con step are
the propositional connectives in the formulae, and the pattern of occurrence
of the atomic formulae.
What this means is that the meanings of the predicate symbols and names
in the formulae do not matter, and Fitchs goggles obscure this information.
When you put the goggles on, every individual atomic formula involved in the
step appears as a block of color, hiding the particular atomic formula that is
present. Every occurrence of the same atomic formula will be represented by
the same color, and dierent formulae will have dierent colors.
You try it
................................................................
1. Return to the file Taut Con 1 again that you made in the previous You
Try It section, and focus on the last step of the proof, which contains an
Section 4.4
116 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
2. Click on the picture of a pair of goggles that appears to the right of the
rule name, and notice how the conclusion and the cited sentences change
into blocks of color.
Home(max) Hungry(carl)
Chapter 4
Tautological consequence in Fitch / 117
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Taut Con 2. You will find a proof containing ten steps whose
rules have not been specified.
2. Focus on each step in turn. You will find that the supporting steps have
already been cited. Convince yourself that the step follows from the cited
sentences. Is it a tautological consequence of the sentences cited? If so,
change the rule to Taut Con and see if you were right. If not, change it
to Ana Con and see if it checks out. (If Taut Con will work, make sure
you use it rather than the stronger Ana Con.)
3. When all of your steps check out using Taut Con or Ana Con, go back
and find the one step whose rule can be changed from Ana Con to the
weaker FO Con.
4. When each step checks out using the weakest Con rule possible, save your
proof as Proof Taut Con 2.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Exercises
4.26 If you skipped the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files Proof Taut
Con 1 and Proof Taut Con 2.
For each of the following arguments, decide whether the conclusion is a tautological consequence of the
premises. If it is, submit a proof that establishes the conclusion using one or more applications of Taut
Con. Do not cite more than two sentences at a time for any of your applications of Taut Con. If
the conclusion is not a consequence of the premises, submit a counterexample world showing that the
argument is not valid.
Section 4.4
118 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Section 4.5
Pushing negation around
(Cube(a) Small(a))
(Cube(a) Small(a))
will be logically equivalent to the original, a fact that you can check by con-
structing a joint truth table for the two sentences.
We can state this important fact in the following way. Lets write S(P)
for an fol sentence that contains the (possibly complex) sentence P as a
component part, and S(Q) for the result of substituting Q for P in S(P). Then
if P and Q are logically equivalent:
PQ
Chapter 4
Pushing negation around / 119
S(P) S(Q)
This is known as the principle of substitution of logical equivalents.
We wont prove this principle at the moment, because it requires a proof
by induction, a style of proof we get to in a later chapter. But the observation
allows us to use a few simple equivalences to do some pretty amazing things.
For example, using only the two DeMorgan laws and double negation, we can
take any sentence built up with , , and , and transform it into one where
applies only to atomic sentences. Another way of expressing this is that any
sentence built out of atomic sentences using the three connectives , , and
is logically equivalent to one built from literals using just and .
To obtain such a sentence, you simply drive the in, switching to ,
to , and canceling any pair of s that are right next to each other, not
separated by any parentheses. Such a sentence is said to be in negation normal negation normal form
form or NNF. Here is an example of a derivation of the negation normal form (NNF)
of a sentence. We use A, B, and C to stand for any atomic sentences of the
language.
((A B) C) (A B) C
(A B) C
(A B) C
In reading and giving derivations of this sort, remember that the symbol
is not itself a symbol of the first-order language, but a shorthand way of
saying that two sentences are logically equivalent. In this derivation, the first
step is an application of the first DeMorgan law to the whole sentence. The
second step applies double negation to the component C. The final step is
an application of the second DeMorgan law to the component (A B). The
sentence we end up with is in negation normal form, since the negation signs
apply only to atomic sentences.
We end this section with a list of some additional logical equivalences
that allow us to simplify sentences in useful ways. You already constructed
truth tables for most of these equivalences in Exercises 4.13-4.16 at the end
of Section 4.2.
1. (Associativity of ) An fol sentence P (Q R) is logically equivalent associativity
to (P Q) R, which is in turn equivalent to P Q R. That is,
P (Q R) (P Q) R P Q R
Section 4.5
120 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
PP P
PP P
Here is an example where we use some of these laws to show that the first
sentence in the following list is logically equivalent to the last. Once again (as
in what follows), we use A, B, and C to stand for arbitrary atomic sentences
of fol. Thus the result is in negation normal form.
(A B) C ((B A) B) (A B) C ((B A) B)
(A B) C ((B A) B)
(A B) C (B A B)
(A B) C (B A)
(A B) C (A B)
(A B) C
Chapter 4
Pushing negation around / 121
We call a demonstration of this sort a chain of equivalences. The first step chain of equivalences
in this chain is justified by one of the DeMorgan laws. The second step involves
two applications of double negation. In the next step we use associativity to
remove the unnecessary parentheses. In the fourth step, we use idempotence
of . The next to the last step uses commutativity of , while the final step
uses idempotence of .
Remember
PQ
then the results of substituting one for the other in the context of a
larger sentence are also logically equivalent:
S(P) S(Q)
3. Any sentence built from atomic sentences using just , , and can
be put into negation normal form by repeated application of the De-
Morgan laws and double negation.
Exercises
4.31 (Negation normal form) Use Tarskis World to open Turings Sentences. You will find the fol-
lowing five sentences, each followed by an empty sentence position.
1. (Cube(a) Larger(a, b))
3. (Cube(a) Larger(b, a))
5. (Cube(a) Larger(a, b) a = b)
7. (Tet(b) (Large(c) Smaller(d, e)))
9. Dodec(f) (Tet(b) Tet(f) Dodec(f))
In the empty positions, write the negation normal form of the sentence above it. Then build
any world where all of the names are in use. If you have gotten the negation normal forms
Section 4.5
122 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
correct, each even numbered sentence will have the same truth value in your world as the odd
numbered sentence above it. Verify that this is so in your world. Submit the modified sentence
file as Sentences 4.31.
4.32 (Negation normal form) Use Tarskis World to open the file Sextus Sentences. In the odd
numbered slots, you will find the following sentences.
1. (Home(carl) Home(claire))
3. [Happy(max) (Likes(carl, claire) Likes(claire, carl))]
5. [(Home(max) Home(carl)) (Happy(max) Happy(carl))]
Use Double Negation and DeMorgans laws to put each sentence into negation normal form in
the slot below it. Submit the modified file as Sentences 4.32.
In each of the following exercises, use associativity, commutativity, and idempotence to simplify the
sentence as much as you can using just these rules. Your answer should consist of a chain of logical
equivalences like the chain given on page 120. At each step of the chain, indicate which principle you
are using.
Section 4.6
Conjunctive and disjunctive normal forms
We have seen that with a few simple principles of Boolean logic, we can
start with a sentence and transform it into a logically equivalent sentence
in negation normal form, one where all negations occur in front of atomic
sentences. We can improve on this by introducing the so-called distributive
laws. These additional equivalences will allow us to transform sentences into
what are known as conjunctive normal form (CNF) and disjunctive normal
form (DNF). These normal forms are quite important in certain applications
of logic in computer science, as we discuss in Chapter 17. We will also use
disjunctive normal form to demonstrate an important fact about the Boolean
connectives in Chapter 7.
Recall that in algebra you learned that multiplication distributes over ad-
distribution dition: a(b+c) = (ab)+(ac). The distributive laws of logic look formally
Chapter 4
Conjunctive and disjunctive normal forms / 123
Remember
1. Distribution of over : P (Q R) (P Q) (P R)
2. Distribution of over : P (Q R) (P Q) (P R)
As you may recall from algebra, the distributive law for over + is in-
credibly useful. It allows us to transform any algebraic expression involving +
and , no matter how complex, into one that is just a sum of products. For
example, the following transformation uses distribution three times.
(a + b)(c + d) = (a + b)c + (a + b)d
= ac + bc + (a + b)d
= ac + bc + ad + bd
In exactly the same way, the distribution of over allows us to transform
any sentence built up from literals by means of and into a logically
equivalent sentence that is a disjunction of (one or more) conjunctions of
(one or more) literals. That is, using this first distributive law, we can turn
any sentence in negation normal form into a sentence that is a disjunction of
conjunctions of literals. A sentence in this form is said to be in disjunctive disjunctive normal
normal form. form (DNF)
Here is an example that parallels our algebraic example. Notice that, as
in the algebraic example, we are distributing in from the right as well as the
left, even though our statement of the rule only illustrates distribution from
the left.
(A B) (C D) [(A B) C] [(A B) D]
(A C) (B C) [(A B) D]
(A C) (B C) (A D) (B D)
Section 4.6
124 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
(A B) (C D) [(A B) C] [(A B) D]
(A C) (B C) [(A B) D]
(A C) (B C) (A D) (B D)
((A B) C) (A B) C
(A B) C
(A B) C
(A C) (B C)
Home(claire) Home(max)
is in both DNF and CNF. On the one hand, it is in disjunctive normal form
since it is a disjunction of one sentence (itself) which is a conjunction of two
literals. On the other hand, it is in conjunctive normal form since it is a
conjunction of two sentences, each of which is a disjunction of one literal.
In case you find this last remark confusing, here are simple tests for
whether sentences are in disjunctive normal form and conjunctive normal
form. The tests assume that the sentence has no unnecessary parentheses and
contains only the connectives , , and .
test for DNF To check whether a sentence is in DNF, ask yourself whether all the
Chapter 4
Conjunctive and disjunctive normal forms / 125
Now look at the above sentence again and notice that it passes both of
these tests (in the CNF case because it has no disjunction signs).
Remember
You try it
................................................................
1. Use Tarskis World to open the file DNF Example. In this file you will find
two sentences. The second sentence is the result of putting the first into
disjunctive normal form, so the two sentences are logically equivalent.
2. Build a world in which the sentences are true. Since they are equivalent,
you could try to make either one true, but you will find the second one
easier to work on.
3. Play the game for each sentence, committed correctly to the truth of the
sentence. You should be able to win both times. Count the number of steps
it takes you to win.
Section 4.6
126 / The Logic of Boolean Connectives
Exercises
4.38 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file World DNF 1.
4.39 Open CNF Sentences. In this file you will find the following conjunctive normal form sentences
in the odd numbered positions, but you will see that the even numbered positions are blank.
1. (LeftOf(a, b) BackOf(a, b)) Cube(a)
3. Larger(a, b) (Cube(a) Tet(a) a = b)
5. (Between(a, b, c) Tet(a) Tet(b)) Dodec(c)
7. Cube(a) Cube(b) (Small(a) Small(b))
9. (Small(a) Medium(a)) (Cube(a) Dodec(a))
In the even numbered positions you should fill in a DNF sentence logically equivalent to the
sentence above it. Check your work by opening several worlds and checking to see that each
of your sentences has the same truth value as the one above it. Submit the modified file as
Sentences 4.39.
4.40 Open More CNF Sentences. In this file you will find the following sentences in every third
position.
1. [(Cube(a) Small(a)) (Cube(a) Small(a))]
4. [(Cube(a) Small(a)) (Cube(a) Small(a))]
7. (Cube(a) Larger(a, b)) Dodec(b)
10. (Cube(a) Tet(b))
13. Cube(a) Tet(b)
The two blanks that follow each sentence are for you to first transform the sentence into negation
normal form, and then put that sentence into CNF. Again, check your work by opening several
worlds to see that each of your sentences has the same truth value as the original. When you
are finished, submit the modified file as Sentences 4.40.
Chapter 4
Conjunctive and disjunctive normal forms / 127
In Exercises 4.41-4.43, use a chain of equivalences to convert each sentence into an equivalent sentence
in disjunctive normal form. Simplify your answer as much as possible using the laws of associativity,
commutativity, and idempotence. At each step in your chain, indicate which principle you are applying.
Assume that A, B, C, and D are literals.
4.43 A (A (B (A C)))
.
Section 4.6
Chapter 5
Truth tables give us powerful techniques for investigating the logic of the
Boolean operators. But they are by no means the end of the story. Truth
tables are fine for showing the validity of simple arguments that depend only
on truth-functional connectives, but the method has two very significant lim-
itations.
limitations of truth First, truth tables get extremely large as the number of atomic sentences
table methods goes up. An argument involving seven atomic sentences is hardly unusual, but
testing it for validity would call for a truth table with 27 = 128 rows. Testing
an argument with 14 atomic sentences, just twice as many, would take a table
containing over 16 thousand rows. You could probably get a Ph.D. in logic for
building a truth table that size. This exponential growth severely limits the
practical value of the truth table method.
The second limitation is, surprisingly enough, even more significant. Truth
table methods cant be easily extended to reasoning whose validity depends
on more than just truth-functional connectives. As you might guess from the
artificiality of the arguments looked at in the previous chapter, this rules out
most kinds of reasoning youll encounter in everyday life. Ordinary reasoning
relies heavily on the logic of the Boolean connectives, make no mistake about
that. But it also relies on the logic of other kinds of expressions. Since the
truth table method detects only tautological consequence, we need a method
of applying Boolean logic that can work along with other valid principles of
reasoning.
Methods of proof, both formal and informal, give us the required exten-
sibility. In this chapter we will discuss legitimate patterns of inference that
arise when we introduce the Boolean connectives into a language, and show
how to apply the patterns in informal proofs. In Chapter 6, well extend our
formal system with corresponding rules. The key advantage of proof methods
over truth tables is that well be able to use them even when the validity of
our proof depends on more than just the Boolean operators.
The Boolean connectives give rise to many valid patterns of inference.
Some of these are extremely simple, like the entailment from the sentence
P Q to P. These we will refer to as valid inference steps, and will discuss
128
Valid inference steps / 129
them briefly in the first section. Much more interesting are two new methods
of proof that are allowed by the new expressions: proof by cases and proof by
contradiction. We will discuss these later, one at a time.
Section 5.1
Valid inference steps
Section 5.1
130 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
Matters of style
Informal proofs serve two purposes. On the one hand, they are a method of
discovery; they allow us to extract new information from information already
obtained. On the other hand, they are a method of communication; they allow
us to convey our discoveries to others. As with all forms of communication,
this can be done well or done poorly.
When we learn to write, we learn certain basic rules of punctuation, capi-
talization, paragraph structure and so forth. But beyond the basic rules, there
are also matters of style. Dierent writers have dierent styles. And it is a
Chapter 5
Valid inference steps / 131
good thing, since we would get pretty tired of reading if everyone wrote with
the very same style. So too in giving proofs. If you go on to study mathemat-
ics, you will read lots of proofs, and you will find that every writer has his or
her own style. You will even develop a style of your own.
Every step in a good proof, besides being correct, should have two prop-
erties. It should be easily understood and significant. By easily understood
we mean that other people should be able to follow the step without undue
diculty: they should be able to see that the step is valid without having to
engage in a piece of complex reasoning of their own. By significant we mean
that the step should be informative, not a waste of the readers time.
These two criteria pull in opposite directions. Typically, the more signif-
icant the step, the harder it is to follow. Good style requires a reasonable
balance between the two. And that in turn requires some sense of who your knowing your audience
audience is. For example, if you and your audience have been working with
logic for a while, you will recognize a number of equivalences that you will
want to use without further proof. But if you or your audience are beginners,
the same inference may require several steps.
Remember
From P Q, infer P.
From P and Q, infer P Q.
From P, infer P Q.
Section 5.1
132 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
Exercises
In the following exercises we list a number of patterns of inference, only some of which are valid. For
each pattern, determine whether it is valid. If it is, explain why it is valid, appealing to the truth tables
for the connectives involved. If it is not, give a specific example of how the step could be used to get from
true premises to a false conclusion.
Section 5.2
Proof by cases
The simple forms of inference discussed in the last section are all instances of
the principle that you can use already established cases of logical consequence
in informal proofs. But the Boolean connectives also give rise to two entirely
new methods of proof, methods that are explicitly applied in all types of
rigorous reasoning. The first of these is the method of proof by cases. In our
formal system F, this method will be called disjunction elimination, but dont
be misled by the ordinary sounding name: it is far more significant than, say,
disjunction introduction or conjunction elimination.
We begin by illustrating proof by cases with a well-known piece of math-
ematical reasoning. The reasoning proves that there are irrational numbers b
and c such that bc is rational. First, lets review what this means. A number
is said to be rational if it can be expressed as a fraction n/m, for integers
n and m. If it cant be so expressed, then it is irrational. Thus 2 is rational
(2 = 2/1), but 2 is irrational. (We will prove this latter fact in the next sec-
tion, to illustrate proof by contradiction; for now, just take it as a well-known
truth.) Here now is our proof:
Proof: To show that there are irrational numbers b and c such that
2
bc is rational, we will consider the number 2 . We note that this
number is either rational or irrational.
Chapter 5
Proof by cases / 133
2
If 2 is rational, then we have found our b and c; namely, we take
b = c = 2.
2
Suppose, on the other hand, that 2 is irrational. Then we take
2
b = 2 and c = 2 and compute bc :
2
bc = ( 2 ) 2
( 2 2)
= 2
2
= 2
= 2
Thus, we see that in this case, too, bc is rational.
2
Consequently, whether 2 is rational or irrational, we know that
there are irrational numbers b and c such that bc is rational.
What interests us here is not the result itself but the general structure of
the argument. We begin with a desired goal that we want to prove, say S, and
a disjunction we already know, say P Q. We then show two things: that S proof by cases
follows if we assume that P is the case, and that S follows if we assume that
Q is the case. Since we know that one of these must hold, we then conclude
that S must be the case. This is the pattern of reasoning known as proof by
cases.
In proof by cases, we arent limited to breaking into just two cases, as we
did in the example. If at any stage in a proof we have a disjunction containing
n disjuncts, say P1 . . . Pn , then we can break into n cases. In the first we
assume P1 , in the second P2 , and so forth for each disjunct. If we are able to
prove our desired result S in each of these cases, we are justified in concluding
that S holds.
Lets look at an even simpler example of proof by cases. Suppose we want
to prove that Small(c) is a logical consequence of
This is pretty obvious, but the proof involves breaking into cases, as you will
notice if you think carefully about how you recognize this. For the record,
here is how we would write out the proof.
Proof: We are given
Section 5.2
134 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
Our next example shows how the odd step of disjunction introduction
(from P infer P Q) can be used fruitfully with proof by cases. Suppose we
know that either Max is home and Carl is happy, or Claire is home and Scruy
is happy, i.e.,
Happy(carl) Happy(scruy)
Then either:
Home(max) Happy(carl)
or:
Home(claire) Happy(scruy).
Happy(carl) Happy(scruy)
Happy(carl) Happy(scruy)
So, in either case, we have our desired conclusion. Thus our conclu-
sion follows by proof by cases.
Chapter 5
Proof by cases / 135
Proof: Either we are going to get a ticket in the next few minutes or
we arent. If we are, then rushing might prevent it, which would be
a good thing. If we arent, then it will still be good exercise and will
also show our respect for the law, both of which are good things. So
in either event, rushing back to the car is a good thing to do.
Remember
Exercises
The next two exercises present valid arguments. Turn in informal proofs of the arguments validity. Your
proofs should be phrased in complete, well-formed English sentences, making use of first-order sentences
as convenient, much in the style we have used above. Whenever you use proof by cases, say so. You dont
have to be explicit about the use of simple proof steps like conjunction elimination. By the way, there is
typically more than one way to prove a given result.
Section 5.2
136 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
5.9 Assume the same four premises as in Exercise 5.8. Is LeftOf(b, c) a logical consequence of
|. these premises? If so, turn in an informal proof of the arguments validity. If not, submit a
counterexample world.
5.10 Suppose Maxs favorite basketball team is the Chicago Bulls and favorite football team is the
. Denver Broncos. Maxs father John is returning from Indianapolis to San Francisco on United
Airlines, and promises that he will buy Max a souvenir from one of his favorite teams on the
way. Explain Johns reasoning, appealing to the annoying fact that all United flights between
Indianapolis and San Francisco stop in either Denver or Chicago. Make explicit the role proof
by cases plays in this reasoning.
5.11 Suppose the police are investigating a burglary and discover the following facts. All the doors
. to the house were bolted from the inside and show no sign of forced entry. In fact, the only
possible ways in and out of the house were a small bathroom window on the first floor that
was left open and an unlocked bedroom window on the second floor. On the basis of this, the
detectives rule out a well-known burglar, Julius, who weighs two hundred and fifty pounds and
is arthritic. Explain their reasoning.
5.12 In our proof that there are irrational numbers b and c where bc is rational, one of our steps
2
. was to assert that 2 is either rational or irrational. What justifies the introduction of this
claim into our proof?
5.13 Describe an everyday example of reasoning by cases that you have performed in the last few
. days.
5.14 Give an informal proof that if S is a tautological consequence of P and a tautological conse-
. quence of Q, then S is a tautological consequence of P Q. Remember that the joint truth
table for P Q and S may have more rows than either the joint truth table for P and S, or the
joint truth table for Q and S. [Hint: Assume you are looking at a single row of the joint truth
table for P Q and S in which P Q is true. Break into cases based on whether P is true or Q
is true and prove that S must be true in either case.]
Chapter 5
Indirect proof: proof by contradiction / 137
Section 5.3
Indirect proof: proof by contradiction
Let us now give a more interesting and famous example of this method of
proof. The Greeks were shocked to discover that the square root of 2 could
not be expressed as a fraction, or, as we would put it, is irrational. The proof
of this fact proceeds via contradiction. Before we go through the proof, lets
review some simple numerical facts that were well known to the Greeks. The
first is that any rational number can be expressed as a fraction p/q where at
least one of p and q is odd. (If not, keep dividing both the numerator and
denominator by 2 until one of them is odd.) The other fact follows from the
observation that when you square an odd number, you always get an odd
number. So if n2 is an even number, then so is n. And from this, we see that
if n2 is even, it must be divisible by 4.
Now were ready for the proof that 2 is irrational.
Section 5.3
138 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
Proof:
With an eye toward getting a contradiction, we will assume
that 2 is rational. Thus, on this assumption, 2 can be expressed
in the form p/q, where at least one of p and q is odd. Since p/q = 2
we can square both sides to get:
p2
=2
q2
Multiplying both sides by q 2 , we get p2 = 2q 2 . But this shows that
p2 is an even number. As we noted before, this allows us to conclude
that p is even and that p2 is divisible by 4. Looking again at the
equation p2 = 2q 2 , we see that if p2 is divisible by 4, then 2q 2 is
divisible by 4 and hence q 2 must be divisible by 2. In which case, q is
even as well. So both p and q are even, contradicting the fact that at
least one of them is odd. Thus, our assumption that 2 is rational
led us to a contradiction, and so we conclude that it is irrational.
Chapter 5
Indirect proof: proof by contradiction / 139
Similarly, the truth table method gives us a way of showing that a col-
lection of sentences are mutually contradictory. Construct a joint truth table
for P1 , . . . , Pn . These sentences are tt-contradictory if every row has an F as- tt-contradictory
signed to at least one of the sentences. If the sentences are tt-contradictory,
we know they cannot all be true at once, simply in virtue of the meanings
of the truth functional connectives out of which they are built. We have al-
ready mentioned one such example: any pair of sentences, one of which is the
negation of the other.
The method of proof by contradiction, like proof by cases, is often encoun-
tered in everyday reasoning, though the derived contradiction is sometimes
left implicit. People will often assume a claim for the sake of argument and
then show that the assumption leads to something else that is known to be
false. They then conclude the negation of the original claim. This sort of rea-
soning is in fact an indirect proof: the inconsistency becomes explicit if we
add the known fact to our set of premises.
Lets look at an example of this kind of reasoning. Imagine a defense
attorney presenting the following summary to the jury:
The prosecution claims that my client killed the owner of the KitKat
Club. Assume that they are correct. Youve heard their own experts
testify that the murder took place at 5:15 in the afternoon. We also
know the defendant was still at work at City Hall at 4:45, according
to the testimony of five co-workers. It follows that my client had to
get from City Hall to the KitKat Club in 30 minutes or less. But
to make that trip takes 35 minutes under the best of circumstances,
and police records show that there was a massive trac jam the day
of the murder. I submit that my client is innocent.
Clearly, reasoning like this is used all the time: whenever we assume some-
thing and then rule out the assumption on the basis of its consequences.
Sometimes these consequences are not contradictions, or even things that we
know to be false, but rather future consequences that we consider unaccept-
able. You might for example assume that you will go to Hawaii for spring
break, calculate the impact on your finances and ability to finish the term
papers coming due, and reluctantly conclude that you cant make the trip.
When you reason like this, you are using the method of indirect proof.
Remember
Section 5.3
140 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
Exercises
In the following exercises, decide whether the displayed argument is valid. If it is, turn in an infor-
mal proof, phrased in complete, well-formed English sentences, making use of first-order sentences as
convenient. Whenever you use proof by cases or proof by contradiction, say so. You dont have to be
explicit about the use of simple proof steps like conjunction elimination. If the argument is invalid, con-
struct a counterexample world in Tarskis World. (Argument 5.16 is valid, and so will not require a
counterexample.)
Does (3) follow from (1) and (2)? Does (2) follow from (1) and (3)? Does (1) follow from (2)
and (3)? In each case, give either a proof of consequence, or describe a situation that makes the
premises true and the conclusion false. You may assume that Folly can only be one persons
pet at any given time.
5.20 Suppose it is Friday night and you are going out with your boyfriend. He wants to see a romantic
. comedy, while you want to see the latest Wes Craven slasher movie. He points out that if he
watches the Wes Craven movie, he will not be able to sleep because he cant stand the sight of
blood, and he has to take the MCAT test tomorrow. If he does not do well on the MCAT, he
wont get into medical school. Analyze your boyfriends argument, pointing out where indirect
proof is being used. How would you rebut his argument?
Chapter 5
Arguments with inconsistent premises / 141
5.21 Describe an everyday example of an indirect proof that you have used in the last few days.
.
5.22 Prove that indirect proof is a tautologically valid method of proof. That is, show that if
. P1 , . . . , Pn , S is tt-contradictory, then S is a tautological consequence of P1 , . . . , Pn .
In the next three exercises we ask you to prove simple facts about the natural numbers. We do not expect
you to phrase the proofs in fol. You will have to appeal to basic facts of arithmetic plus the definitions
of even and odd number. This is OK, but make these appeals explicit. Also make explicit any use of proof
by contradiction.
Section 5.4
Arguments with inconsistent premises
What follows from an inconsistent set of premises? If you look back at our
definition of logical consequence, you will see that every sentence is a conse-
quence of such a set. After all, if the premises are contradictory, then there
are no circumstances in which they are all true. Thus, there are no circum-
stances in which the premises are true and the conclusion is false. Which is
to say, in any situation in which the premises are all true (there arent any
of these!), the conclusion will be true as well. Hence any argument with an always valid
inconsistent set of premises is trivially valid. In particular, if one can establish
a contradiction on the basis of the premises, then one is entitled to assert
any sentence at all.
This often strikes students as a very odd method of reasoning, and for very
good reason. For recall the distinction between a valid argument and a sound
one. A sound argument is a valid argument with true premises. Even though
any argument with an inconsistent set of premises is valid, no such argument
is sound, since there is no way the premises of the argument can all be true.
For this reason, an argument with an inconsistent set of premises is not worth
Section 5.4
142 / Methods of Proof for Boolean Logic
never sound much on its own. After all, the reason we are interested in logical consequence
is because of its relation to truth. If the premises cant possibly be true, then
even knowing that the argument is valid gives us no clue as to the truth or
falsity of the conclusion. An unsound argument gives no more support for its
conclusion than an invalid one.
In general, methods of proof dont allow us to show that an argument
is unsound. After all, the truth or falsity of the premises is not a matter of
logic, but of how the world happens to be. But in the case of arguments with
inconsistent premises, our methods of proof do give us a way to show that at
least one of the premises is false (though we might not know which one), and
hence that the argument is unsound. To do this, we prove that the premises
are inconsistent by deriving a contradiction.
Suppose, for example, you are given a proof that the following argument
is valid:
Home(max) Home(claire)
Home(max)
Home(claire)
Home(max) Happy(carl)
Remember
Exercises
5.27 Give two dierent proofs that the premises of the above argument are inconsistent. Your first
. should use proof by cases but not DeMorgans law, while your second can use DeMorgan but
not proof by cases.
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
The deductive system F is what is known as a system of natural deduction. natural deduction
Such systems are intended to be models of the valid principles of reasoning
used in informal proofs. In this chapter, we will present the inference rules of
F that correspond to the informal principles of Boolean reasoning discussed in
the previous chapter. You will easily recognize the rules as formal counterparts
of some of the principles weve already discussed.
Although natural deduction systems like F are meant to model informal
reasoning, they are also designed to be relatively spare or stripped down
versions of such reasoning. For example, we told you that in giving an informal
proof, you can always presuppose steps that you and your audience already
know to be logically valid. So if one of the equivalence laws is not at issue
in a proof, you can simply apply it in a single step of your informal proof.
However, in F we will give you a very elegant but restricted collection of
inference rules that you must apply in constructing a formal proof. Many of
the valid inference steps that we have seen (like the DeMorgan Laws) are not
allowed as single steps; they must be justified in terms of more basic steps.
The advantage to this lean and mean approach is that it makes it easier to
prove results about the deductive system, since the fewer the rules, the simpler
the system. For example, one of the things we can prove is that anything you
could demonstrate with a system that contained rules for all of the named
logical equivalences of Chapter 4 can be proved in the leaner system F.
Systems of natural deduction like F use two rules for each connective,
one that allows us to prove statements containing the symbol, and one that
allows us to prove things from statements containing the symbol. The former
are called introduction rules since they let us introduce these symbols into introduction and
proofs. By contrast, the latter are called elimination rules. This is similar to elimination rules
our treatment of the identity predicate in Chapter 2. If you go on to study
proof theory in more advanced logic courses, you will see that that this elegant
pairing of rules has many advantages over systems that include more inference
steps as basic.
The formal rules of F are all implemented in the program Fitch, allowing
you to construct formal proofs much more easily than if you had to write
them out by hand. Actually, Fitchs interpretation of the introduction and
143
144 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
elimination rules is a bit more generous in spirit than F. It doesnt allow you
to do anything that F wouldnt permit, but there are cases where Fitch will
let you do in one step what might take several in F. Also, many of Fitchs
rule defaults rules have default applications that can save you a lot of time. If you want
the default use of some rule, all you have to do is specify the rule and cite
the step or steps you are applying it to; Fitch will then fill in the appropriate
conclusion for you. Similarly, if you have filled in the formula and rule, Fitch
can sometimes add appropriate support steps for you via the Add Support
Steps command. At the end of each section below well explain the default
uses of the rules introduced in that section.
Section 6.1
Conjunction rules
The simplest principles to formalize are those that involve the conjunction
symbol . These are the rules of conjunction elimination and conjunction
introduction.
Conjunction elimination
P1 . . . Pi . . . Pn
..
.
Pi
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Conjunction 1. There are three sentences that you are asked
to prove. They are shown in the goal strip at the bottom of the proof
window as usual.
2. The first sentence you are to prove is Tet(a). To do this, first add a new
step to the proof and write the sentence Tet(a).
Chapter 6
Conjunction rules / 145
3. Next, go to the popup Rule? menu and under the Elimination Rules,
choose .
4. If you try to check this step, you will see that it fails, because you have
have not yet cited any sentences in support of the step. In this example,
you need to cite the single premise in support. Do this and then check the
step.
5. You should be able to prove each of the other sentences similarly, by means
of a single application of Elim. When you have proven these sentences,
check your goals and save the proof as Proof Conjunction 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Conjunction introduction
P1
Pn
..
.
P1 . . . Pn
P1
Pn
to indicate that each of P1 through Pn must appear in the proof before you
can assert their conjunction. The order in which they appear does not matter,
and they do not have to appear one right after another. They just need to
appear somewhere earlier in the proof.
Here is a simple example of our two conjunction rules at work together. It
is a proof of C B from A B C.
Section 6.1
146 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
1. A B C
2. B Elim: 1
3. C Elim: 1
4. C B Intro: 3, 2
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the file Conjunction 2. We will help you prove the two sentences
requested in the goals. You will need to use both of the conjunction rules
in each case.
2. The first goal is Medium(d) Large(c). Add a new step and enter this
sentence. (Remember that you can copy the sentence from the goal strip
and paste it into the new step. Its faster than typing it in.)
3. Above the step you just created, add two more steps, typing one of the
conjuncts in each. If you can prove these, then the conclusion will follow
by Intro. Show this by choosing this rule at the conjunction step and
citing the two conjuncts in support.
4. Now all you need to do is prove each of the conjuncts. This is easily done
using the rule Elim at each of these steps. Do this, cite the appropriate
support sentences, and check the proof. The first goal should check out.
5. Prove the second goal sentence similarly. Once both goals check out, save
your proof as Proof Conjunction 2.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Chapter 6
Conjunction rules / 147
What we have done here is pick two of the conjuncts from step 17 and assert
the conjunction of these in step 26. Technically, F would require us to de-
rive the two conjuncts separately and, like Humpty Dumpty, put them back
together again. Fitch does this for us.
Since Fitch lets you take any collection of conjuncts in the cited sentence
and assert their conjunction in any order, Fitchs interpretation of Elim
allows you to prove that conjunction is commutative. In other words, you
can use it to take a conjunction and reorder its conjuncts however you please:
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the file Conjunction 3. Notice that there are two goals. The first goal
asks you to prove Tet(c) Tet(a) from the premise. Strictly speaking, this
would take two uses of Elim followed by one use of Intro. However,
Fitch lets you do this with a single use of Elim. Try this and then check
the step.
2. Verify that the second goal sentence also follows by a single application of
Fitchs rule of Elim. When you have proven these sentences, check your
goals and save the proof as Proof Conjunction 3.
3. Next try out other sentences to see whether they follow from the given
sentence by Elim. For example, does Tet(c) Small(a) follow? Should
it?
4. When you are satisfied you understand conjunction elimination, close the
file, but dont save the changes you made in step 3.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
The Intro rule implemented in Fitch is also less restrictive than our dis-
cussion of the formal rule might suggest. First of all, Fitch does not care about
the order in which you cite the supporting sentences. Second, if you cite a sen-
tence, that sentence can appear more than once as a conjunct in the concluding
sentence. For example, you can use this rule to conclude Cube(a) Cube(a)
from the sentence Cube(a), if you want to for some reason.
Section 6.1
148 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
Both of the conjunction rules have default uses. If at a new step you cite
default uses of a conjunction and specify the rule as Elim, then when you check the step
conjunction rules (or choose Check Proof), Fitch will fill in the blank step with the leftmost
conjunct in the cited sentence. If you cite several sentences and apply Intro,
Fitch will fill in the conjunction of those steps, ordering conjuncts in the same
order they were cited.
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the file Conjunction 4.
2. Move the focus to the first blank step, the one immediately following the
premises. Notice that this step has a rule specified, as well as a support
sentence cited. Check the step to see what default Fitch generates.
3. Then, focus on each successive step, try to predict what the default will
be, and check the step. (The last two steps give dierent results because
we entered the support steps in dierent orders.)
4. When you have checked all the steps, save your proof as Proof Conjunc-
tion 4.
5. Feel free to experiment with the rule defaults some more, to see when they
are useful.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
You can use the Add Support Steps command (found on the Proof
menu) with either of the conjunction rules. In either case you must have
chosen a rule, and have entered a formula in the focus step. In the case of
Elim, a single support step will be created, and this step will contain the
formula at the focus step, followed by a conjunction symbol to indicate that
you must enter more conjuncts to complete the support formula. If the Add
Support Steps is used with the Intro rule, and the focus formula is a
conjunction, then one support step is introduced for each conjunct of the focus
formula.
One final point: In applying conjunction introduction, you will sometimes
parentheses and have to be careful about parentheses, due to our conventions about dropping
conjunction rules outermost parentheses. If one of the conjuncts is itself a conjunction, then
of course there is no need to add any parentheses before forming the larger
conjunction, unless you want to. For example, the following are both correct
applications of the rule. (The first is what Fitchs default mechanism would
give you.)
Chapter 6
Disjunction rules / 149
Correct: 1. A B
2. C
3. (A B) C Intro: 1, 2
Correct: 1. A B
2. C
3. A B C Intro: 1, 2
Wrong: 1. A B
2. C
3. A B C Intro: 1, 2
Section 6.2
Disjunction rules
We know: the conjunction rules were boring. Not so the disjunction rules,
particularly disjunction elimination.
Disjunction introduction
Pi
..
.
P1 . . . Pi . . . Pn
Section 6.2
150 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
Once again, we stress that Pi may be the first or last disjunct of the conclusion.
Further, as with conjunction introduction, some thought ought to be given to
whether parentheses must be added to Pi to prevent ambiguity.
As we explained in Chapter 5, disjunction introduction is a less peculiar
rule than it may at first appear. But before we look at a sensible example of
how it is used, we need to have at our disposal the second disjunction rule.
Disjunction elimination
We now come to the first rule that corresponds to what we called a method
of proof in the last chapter. This is the rule of disjunction elimination, the
formal counterpart of proof by cases. Recall that proof by cases allows you
to conclude a sentence S from a disjunction P1 . . . Pn if you can prove
S from each of P1 through Pn individually. The form of this rule requires us
to discuss an important new structural feature of the Fitch-style system of
deduction. This is the notion of a subproof.
subproofs A subproof, as the name suggests, is a proof that occurs within the context
of a larger proof. As with any proof, a subproof generally begins with an as-
sumption, separated from the rest of the subproof by the Fitch bar. But the
temporary assumption of a subproof, unlike a premise of the main proof, is only temporar-
assumptions ily assumed. Throughout the course of the subproof itself, the assumption acts
just like an additional premise. But after the subproof, the assumption is no
longer in force.
Before we give the schematic form of disjunction elimination, lets look at
a particular proof that uses the rule. This will serve as a concrete illustration
of how subproofs appear in F.
1. (A B) (C D)
2. A B
3. B Elim: 2
4. B D Intro: 3
5. C D
6. D Elim: 5
7. B D Intro: 6
8. B D Elim: 1, 24, 57
Chapter 6
Disjunction rules / 151
P1 . . . Pn
..
.
P1
..
.
S
Pn
..
.
S
..
.
S
Section 6.2
152 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
rule, you will cite the step containing the disjunction, plus each of the required
subproofs.
Lets look at another example of this rule, to emphasize how justifications
involving subproofs are given. Here is a proof showing that A follows from the
sentence (B A) (A C).
1. (B A) (A C)
2. B A
3. A Elim: 2
4. A C
5. A Elim: 4
6. A Elim: 1, 23, 45
The citation for step 6 shows the form we use when citing subproofs. The
citation nm is our way of referring to the subproof that begins on line n
and ends on line m.
Sometimes, in using disjunction elimination, you will find it natural to use
the reiteration rule introduced in Chapter 3. For example, suppose we modify
the above proof to show that A follows from (B A) A.
1. (B A) A
2. B A
3. A Elim: 2
4. A
5. A Reit: 4
6. A Elim: 1, 23, 45
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the file Disjunction 1. In this file, you are asked to prove
Chapter 6
Disjunction rules / 153
Medium(c) Large(c)
from the sentence
We are going to step you through the construction of the following proof:
2. Cube(c) Large(c)
3. Large(c) Elim: 2
4. Medium(c) Large(c) Intro: 3
5. Medium(c)
6. Medium(c) Large(c) Intro: 5
7. Medium(c) Large(c) Elim: 1, 24, 56
2. To use Elim in this case, we need to get two subproofs, one for each
of the disjuncts in the premise. It is a good policy to begin by specifying
both of the necessary subproofs before doing anything else. To start a
subproof, add a new step and choose New Subproof from the Proof
menu. Fitch will indent the step and allow you to enter the sentence you
want to assume. Enter the first disjunct of the premise, Cube(c) Large(c),
as the assumption of this subproof.
3. Rather than work on this subproof now, lets specify the second case before
we forget what were trying to do. To do this, we need to end the first
subproof and start a second subproof after it. You end the current subproof
by choosing End Subproof from the Proof menu. This will give you a
new step outside of, but immediately following the subproof.
4. Start your second subproof at this new step by choosing New Subproof
from the Proof menu. This time type the other disjunct of the premise,
Medium(c). We have now specified the assumptions of the two cases we
need to consider. Our goal is to prove that the conclusion follows in both
of these cases.
5. Go back to the first subproof and add a step following the assumption. (Fo-
cus on the assumption step of the subproof and choose Add Step After
from the Proof menu.) In this step use Elim to prove Large(c). Then
add another step to that subproof and prove the goal sentence, using
Intro. In both steps, you will have to cite the necessary support sentences.
Section 6.2
154 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
6. After youve finished the first subproof and all the steps check out, move
the focus slider to the assumption step of the second subproof and add a
new step. Use Intro to prove the goal sentence from your assumption.
7. Weve now derived the goal sentence in both of the subproofs, and so are
ready to add the final step of our proof. While focussed on the last step of
the second subproof, choose End Subproof from the Proof menu. Enter
the goal sentence into this new step.
8. Specify the rule in the final step as Elim. For support, cite the two
subproofs and the premise. Check your completed proof. If it does not
check out, compare your proof carefully with the proof displayed above.
Have you accidentally gotten one of your subproofs inside the other one?
If so, delete the misplaced subproof by focusing on the assumption and
choosing Delete Step from the Proof menu. Then try again.
9. When the entire proof checks out, save it as Proof Disjunction 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
There are a couple of ways in which Fitch is more lenient in checking Elim
than the strict form of the rule suggests. First, the sentence S does not have
to be the last sentence in the subproof, though usually it will be. S simply has
to appear on the main level of each subproof, not necessarily as the very
last step. Second, if you start with a disjunction containing more than two
disjuncts, say P Q R, Fitch doesnt require three subproofs. If you have
one subproof starting with P and one starting with Q R, or one starting
with Q and one starting with P R, then Fitch will still be happy, as long as
youve proven S in each of these cases.
default uses of Both disjunction rules have default applications, though they work rather
disjunction rules dierently. If you cite appropriate support for Elim (i.e., a disjunction
and subproofs for each disjunct) and then check the step without typing a
sentence, Fitch will look at the subproofs cited and, if they all end with the
same sentence, insert that sentence into the step. If you cite a sentence and
apply Intro without typing a sentence, Fitch will insert the cited sentence
followed by , leaving the insertion point after the so you can type in the
rest of the disjunction you had in mind.
Chapter 6
Disjunction rules / 155
You try it
................................................................
The required proof is almost complete, though it may not look like it.
2. Focus on each empty step in succession, checking the step so that Fitch
will fill in the default sentence. On the second empty step you will have to
finish the sentence by typing in the second disjunct, (Cube(b) Large(b)),
of the goal sentence. (If the last step does not generate a default, it is
because you have not typed the right thing in the Intro step.)
3. When you are finished, see if the proof checks out. Do you understand the
proof? Could you have come up with it on your own?
Exercises
6.1 If you skipped any of the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files Proof
Conjunction 1, Proof Conjunction 2, Proof Conjunction 3, Proof Conjunction 4, Proof Disjunction
1, and Proof Disjunction 2.
6.2 Open the file Exercise 6.2, which contains an incomplete formal proof. As it stands, none of
the steps check out, either because no rule has been specified, no support steps cited, or no
sentence typed in. Provide the missing pieces and submit the completed proof.
Use Fitch to construct formal proofs for the following arguments. You will find Exercise files for each
argument in the usual place. As usual, name your solutions Proof 6.x.
Section 6.2
156 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
6.5 A (B C) 6.6 (A B) (A C)
(A B) (A C) A (B C)
Section 6.3
Negation rules
Last but not least are the negation rules. It turns out that negation introduc-
tion is our most interesting and complex rule.
Negation elimination
The rule of negation elimination corresponds to a very trivial valid step, from
P to P. Schematically:
P
..
.
P
Negation introduction
Chapter 6
Negation rules / 157
P
..
.
P
Introduction
Introduction ( Intro):
P
..
.
P
..
.
Section 6.3
158 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
Chapter 6
Negation rules / 159
You try it
................................................................
2. We will step you through the construction of the following simple proof.
1. A
2. A
3. Intro: 1, 2
4. A Intro: 23
3. To construct this proof, add a step immediately after the premise. Turn it
into a subproof by choosing New Subproof from the Proof menu. Enter
the assumption A.
4. Add a new step to the subproof and enter , changing the rule to Intro.
Cite the appropriate steps and check the step.
5. Now end the subproof and enter the final sentence, A, after the sub-
proof. Specify the rule as Intro, cite the preceding subproof and check
the step. Your whole proof should now check out.
6. Notice that in the third line of your proof you cited a step outside the
subproof, namely the premise. This is legitimate, but raises an important
issue. Just what steps can be cited at a given point in a proof? As a first
guess, you might think that you can cite any earlier step. But this turns
out to be wrong. We will explain why, and what the correct answer is, in
the next section.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
The contradiction symbol acts just like any other sentence in a proof. In
particular, if you are reasoning by cases and derive in each of your subproofs,
then you can use Elim to derive in your main proof. For example, here
is a proof that the premises A B, A, and B are inconsistent.
Section 6.3
160 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
1. A B
2. A
3. B
4. A
5. Intro: 4, 2
6. B
7. Intro: 6, 3
8. Elim: 1, 45, 67
The rule of Intro recognizes only the most blatant contradictions, those
where you have established a sentence P and its negation P. What if in the
course of a proof you come across an inconsistency of some other form? For
example, suppose you manage to derive a single tt-contradictory sentence
like (A A), or the two sentences A B and A B, which together form
a tt-contradictory set?
It turns out that if you can prove any tt-contradictory sentence or sen-
tences, the rules weve already given you will allow you to prove . It may
take a fair amount of eort and ingenuity, but it is possible. Well eventually
prove this, but for now youll have to take our word for it.
One way to check whether some sentences are tt-contradictory is to try to
introducing derive from them using a single application of Taut Con. In other words,
with Taut Con enter , cite the sentences, and choose Taut Con from the Rule? menu. If
Taut Con tells you that follows from the cited sentences, then you can be
sure that it is possible to prove this using just the introduction and elimination
rules for , , , and .
Of course, there are other forms of contradiction besides tt-contradictions.
For example, suppose you manage to prove the three sentences Cube(b), b = c,
and Cube(c). These sentences are not tt-contradictory, but you can see
that a single application of = Elim will give you the tt-contradictory pair
Cube(c) and Cube(c). If you suspect that you have derived some sentences
Chapter 6
Negation rules / 161
whose inconsistency results from the Boolean connectives plus the identity
predicate, you can check this using the FO Con mechanism, since FO Con introducing
understands the meaning of =. If FO Con says that follows from the cited with FO Con
sentences (and if those sentences do not contain quantifiers), then you should
be able to prove using just the introduction and elimination rules for =, ,
, , and .
The only time you may arrive at a contradiction but not be able to prove
using the rules of F is if the inconsistency depends on the meanings of
predicates other than identity. For example, suppose you derived the contra-
diction n < n, or the contradictory pair of sentences Cube(b) and Tet(b). The
rules of F give you no way to get from these sentences to a contradiction of
the form P and P, at least without some further premises.
What this means is that in Fitch, the Ana Con mechanism will let you introducing
establish contradictions that cant be derived in F. Of course, the Ana Con with Ana Con
mechanism only understands predicates in the blocks language (and even
there, it excludes Adjoins and Between). But it will allow you to derive
from, for example, the two sentences Cube(b) and Tet(b). You can either do
this directly, by entering and citing the two sentences, or indirectly, by
using Ana Con to prove, say, Cube(b) from Tet(b).
You try it
................................................................
1. Open Negation 2 using Fitch. In this file you will find an incomplete proof.
As premises, we have listed a number of sentences, several groups of which
are contradictory.
2. Focus on each step that contains the symbol. You will see that various
sentences are cited in support of the step. Only one of these steps is an
application of the Intro rule. Which one? Specify the rule for that step
as Intro and check it.
3. Among the remaining steps, you will find one where the cited sentences
form a tt-contradictory set of sentences. Which one? Change the justifi-
cation at that step to Taut Con and check the step. Since it checks out,
we assure you that you can derive from these same premises using just
the Boolean rules.
4. Of the remaining steps, the supports of two are contradictory in view of the
meaning of the identity symbol =. Which steps? Change the justification
at those step to FO Con and check the steps. To derive from these
premises, you would need the identity rules (in one case = Elim, in the
other = Intro).
Section 6.3
162 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
5. Verify that the remaining steps cannot be justified by any of the rules
Intro, Taut Con or FO Con. Change the justification at those steps to
Ana Con and check the steps.
6. Save your proof as Proof Negation 2. (Needless to say, this is a formal proof
of inconsistency with a vengeance!)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Elimination
Elimination ( Elim):
..
.
P
The following You try it section illustrates both of the rules. Be sure
to go through it, as it presents a proof tactic you will have several occasions
to use.
You try it
................................................................
1. It often happens in giving proofs using Elim that one really wants
to eliminate one or more of the disjuncts, because they contradict other
assumptions. The form of the Elim rule does not permit this, though.
The proof we will construct here shows how to get around this diculty.
2. Using Fitch, open the file Negation 3. We will use Elim and the two
rules to prove P from the premises P Q and Q.
3. Start two subproofs, the first with assumption P, the second with assump-
tion Q. Our goal is to establish P in both subproofs.
4. In the first subproof, we can simply use reiteration to repeat the assump-
tion P.
Chapter 6
Negation rules / 163
6. Since you now have P in both subproofs, you can finish the proof using
Elim. Complete the proof.
Still, we include Elim to make our proofs shorter and more natural.
The rule of Elim allows you to take o two negation signs from the front of
a sentence. Repeated uses of this rule would allow you to remove four, six, or
indeed any even number of negation signs. For this reason, the implementation
of Elim in Fitch allows you to remove any even number of negation signs in
one step. Similarly for Intro, if the sentence in the assumption step of the
cited subproof is a negation, A, say, we allow you to deduce the unnegated
sentence A, instead of A.
Both of the negation rules have default applications. In a default application default uses of
of Elim, Fitch will remove as many negation signs as possible from the front negation rules
of the cited sentences (the number must be even, of course) and insert the
resulting sentence at the Elim step. In a default application of Intro,
Section 6.3
164 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
the inserted sentence will be the negation of the assumption step of the cited
subproof.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Negation 4. First look at the goal to see what sentence we
are trying to prove. Then focus on each step in succession and check the
step. Before moving to the next step, make sure you understand why the
step checks out and, more important, why we are doing what we are doing
at that step. At the empty steps, try to predict which sentence Fitch will
provide as a default before you check the step.
2. When you are done, make sure you understand the completed proof. Save
your file as Proof Negation 4.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Fitch will add a single support step if you use the Add Support Steps
command when you have entered a formula and chosen the Elim rule. The
support formula will be the formula from the focus step with two negation
symbols preceding it. If you choose the Intro rule and use Add Support
Steps then Fitch will insert a subproof as support, with the negation of the
focus formula as the assumption of the subproof and as the only other
step in the subproof. You can also use Add Support Steps with Elim.
Whatever formula is present, Fitch inserts a single support step containing
the support formula .
Exercises
6.7 If you skipped any of the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files
Proof Negation 1, Proof Negation 2, Proof Negation 3, and Proof Negation 4.
6.8 (Substitution) In informal proofs, we allow you to substitute logically equivalent sentences
for one another, even when they occur in the context of a larger sentence. For example, the
following inference results from two uses of double negation, each applied to a part of the whole
sentence:
P (Q R)
P (Q R)
Chapter 6
Negation rules / 165
How would we prove this using F, which has no substitution rule? Open the file Exercise 6.8,
which contains an incomplete formal proof of this argument. As it stands, none of the proofs
steps check out, because no rules or support steps have been cited. Provide the missing justi-
fications and submit the completed proof.
Evaluate each of the following arguments. If the argument is valid, use Fitch to give a formal proof using
the rules you have learned. If it not valid, use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample world. In
the last two proofs you will need to use Ana Con to show that certain atomic sentences contradict one
another to introduce . Use Ana Con only in this way. That is, your use of Ana Con should cite
exactly two atomic sentences in support of an introduction of . If you have diculty with any of these
exercises, you may want to skip ahead and read Section 6.5.
In the following two exercises, determine whether the sentences are consistent. If they are, use Tarskis
World to build a world where the sentences are both true. If they are inconsistent, use Fitch to give a
proof that they are inconsistent (that is, derive from them). You may use Ana Con in your proof,
but only applied to literals (that is, atomic sentences or negations of atomic sentences).
Section 6.3
166 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
Section 6.4
The proper use of subproofs
1. (B A) (A C)
2. B A
3. B Elim: 2
4. A Elim: 2
5. A C
6. A Elim: 5
7. A Elim: 1, 24, 56
8. A B Intro: 7, 3
The problem with this proof is step 8. In this step we have used step
3, a step that occurs within an earlier subproof. But it turns out that this
sort of justificationone that reaches back inside a subproof that has already
endedis not legitimate. To understand why its not legitimate, we need to
think about what function subproofs play in a piece of reasoning.
A subproof typically looks something like this:
P
..
.
Q
R
..
.
S
T
..
.
Chapter 6
The proper use of subproofs / 167
Section 6.4
168 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
1. (P Q)
2. (P Q)
3. P
4. P Q Intro: 3
5. Intro: 4, 2
6. P Intro: 35
7. P Elim: 6
8. Q
9. P Q Intro: 8
10. Intro: 9, 2
11. Q Intro: 810
12. Q Elim: 11
13. PQ Intro: 7, 12
14. (P Q) Reit: 1
15. Intro: 13, 14
16. (P Q) Intro: 215
17. P Q Elim: 16
Remember
In justifying a step of a subproof, you may cite any earlier step con-
tained in the main proof, or in any subproof whose assumption is still
in force. You may never cite individual steps inside a subproof that
has already ended.
Chapter 6
Strategy and tactics / 169
Exercises
2. Tet(a) Large(c)
3. Tet(a) Elim: 2
4. Tet(a) Dodec(b)
5. Dodec(b) Elim: 4
6. Tet(a) Elim: 4
7. Tet(a) Elim: 1, 23, 46
8. Tet(a) Dodec(b) Intro: 7, 5
What step wont Fitch let you perform? Why? Is the conclusion a consequence of the premise?
Discuss this example in the form of a clear English paragraph, and turn your paragraph in to
your instructor.
Use Fitch to give formal proofs for the following arguments. You will need to use subproofs within
subproofs to prove these.
Section 6.5
Strategy and tactics
Many students try constructing formal proofs by blindly piecing together a se-
quence of steps permitted by the introduction and elimination rules, a process
no more related to reasoning than playing solitaire. This approach occasion-
ally works, but more often than not it will failor at any rate, make it harder
to find a proof. In this section, we will give you some advice about how to
go about finding proofs when they dont jump right out at you. The advice
consists of two important strategies and an essential maxim.
Here is the maxim: Always keep firmly in mind what the sentences in your an important maxim
proof mean! Students who pay attention to the meanings of the sentences avoid
innumerable pitfalls, among them the pitfall of trying to prove a sentence that
Section 6.5
170 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
doesnt really follow from the information given. Your first step in trying to
construct a proof should always be to convince yourself that the claim made
by the conclusion is a consequence of the premises. You should do this even if
the exercise tells you that the argument is valid and simply asks you to find a
proof. For in the process of understanding the sentences and recognizing the
arguments validity, you will often get some idea how to prove it.
After youre convinced that the argument is indeed valid, the first strategy
try informal proof for finding a formal proof is to try giving an informal proof, the kind you might
use to convince a fellow classmate. Often the basic structure of your informal
reasoning can be directly formalized using the rules of F. For example, if
you find yourself using an indirect proof, then that part of the reasoning will
probably require negation introduction in F. If you use proof by cases, then
youll almost surely formalize the proof using disjunction elimination.
Suppose you have decided that the argument is valid, but are having trou-
ble finding an informal proof. Or suppose you cant see how your informal
proof can be converted into a proof that uses just the rules of F. The second
working backwards strategy is helpful in either of these cases. It is known as working backwards.
What you do is look at the conclusion and see what additional sentence or
sentences would allow you to infer that conclusion. Then you simply insert
these steps into your proof, not worrying about exactly how they will be jus-
tified, and cite them in support of your goal sentence. You then take these
intermediate steps as new goals and see if you can prove them. Once you do,
your proof will be complete.
Lets work through an example that applies both of these strategies. Sup-
pose you are asked to give a formal proof of the argument:
P Q
(P Q)
Youll recognize this as an application of one of the DeMorgan laws, so you
know its valid. But when you think about it (applying our maxim) you may
find that what convinces you of its validity is the following observation, which
is hard to formalize: if the premise is true, then either P or Q is false, and
that will make P Q false, and hence the conclusion true. Though this is
a completely convincing argument, it is not immediately clear how it would
translate into the introduction and elimination rules of F.
Lets try working backwards to see if we can come up with an informal
proof that is easier to formalize. Since the conclusion is a negation, we could
prove it by assuming P Q and deriving a contradiction. So lets suppose
P Q and take as our new goal. Now things look a little clearer. For the
premise tells us that either P or Q is true, but either of these cases directly
Chapter 6
Strategy and tactics / 171
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Strategy 1. Begin by entering the desired conclusion in a new
step of the proof. We will construct the proof working backwards, just
like we found our informal proof. Add a step before the conclusion youve
entered so that your proof looks something like this:
1. P Q
2. . . . Rule?
3. (P Q) Rule?
2. The main method used in our informal proof was reductio, which corre-
sponds to negation introduction. So change the blank step into a subproof
with the assumption P Q and the contradiction symbol at the bottom.
(You can also use Add Support Steps op achieve this.) Also add a step
in between these to remind you that thats where you still need to fill
things in, and enter your justification for the final step, so you remember
why you added the subproof. At this point your proof should look roughly
like this:
1. P Q
2. P Q
3. . . . Rule?
4. Rule?
5. (P Q) Intro: 24
Section 6.5
172 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
1. P Q
2. P Q
3. P
4. . . . Rule?
5. Rule?
6. Q
7. . . . Rule?
8. Rule?
9. Elim: 1, 35, 68
10. (P Q) Intro: 29
1. P Q
2. P Q
3. P
4. P Elim: 2
5. Intro: 4, 3
6. Q
7. Q Elim: 2
8. Intro: 7, 6
9. Elim: 1, 35, 68
10. (P Q) Intro: 29
Chapter 6
Strategy and tactics / 173
The problem with this is that A does not follow from the given sentence,
and no amount of work will allow you to prove that it does. If you didnt no-
tice this from the outset, you could spend a lot of time trying to construct an
impossible proof! But if you notice it, you can try a more promising approach.
(In this case, disjunction elimination is clearly the right way to go.) Work-
ing backwards, though a valuable tactic, is no replacement for good honest
thinking.
When youre constructing a formal proof in Fitch, you can avoid trying
to prove an incorrect intermediate conclusion by checking the step with Taut
Con. In the above example, for instance, if you use Taut Con at the second checking with Con
step, citing the premise as support, you would immediately find that it is mechanisms
hopeless to try to prove A from the given premise.
Many of the problems in this book ask you to determine whether an argu-
ment is valid and to back up your answer with either a proof of consequence
or a counterexample, a proof of non-consequence. You will approach these
problems in much the same way weve described, first trying to understand
the claims involved and deciding whether the conclusion follows from the
premises. If you think the conclusion does not follow, or really dont have a
good hunch one way or the other, try to find a counterexample. You may
succeed, in which case you will have shown the argument to be invalid. If you
Section 6.5
174 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
cannot find a counterexample, trying to find one often gives rise to insights
about why the argument is valid, insights that can help you find the required
proof.
We can summarize our strategy advice with a seven step procedure for
approaching problems of this sort.
Remember
2. Decide whether you think the conclusion follows from the premises.
3. If you think it does not follow, or are not sure, try to find a counterex-
ample.
5. If a formal proof is called for, use the informal proof to guide you in
finding one.
One final warning: One of the nice things about Fitch is that it will give
you instant feedback about whether your proof is correct. This is a valuable
using Fitch as a crutch learning tool, but it can be misused. You should not use Fitch as a crutch,
trying out rule applications and letting Fitch tell you if they are correct. If
you do this, then you are not really learning the system F. One way to check
up on yourself is to write a formal proof out on paper every now and then. If
you try this and find you cant do it without Fitchs help, then you are using
Fitch as a crutch, not a learning tool.
Exercises
6.21 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Strategy 1.
Chapter 6
Strategy and tactics / 175
6.22 Give a formal proof mirroring the in- 6.23 Give an informal proof that might have
formal proof on page 137 of (b = c) . been used by the authors in construct-
from the premises Cube(c) Dodec(c) ing the formal proof shown on page 168.
and Tet(b). You may apply Ana Con
to literals in establishing .
In each of the following exercises, give an informal proof of the validity of the indicated argument. (You
should never use the principle you are proving in your informal proof, for example in Exercise 6.24,
you should not use DeMorgan in your informal proof.) Then use Fitch to construct a formal proof that
mirrors your informal proof as much as possible. Turn in your informal proofs to your instructor and
submit the formal proof in the usual way.
6.24 (A B) 6.25 A B
|. |.
A B (A B)
6.26 A (B C) 6.27 (A B) (C D)
|. B C D |. (B C) (D E)
AD C (A E)
In each of the following exercises, you should assess whether the argument is valid. If it is, use Fitch to
construct a formal proof. You may use Ana Con but only involving literals and . If it is not valid,
use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample.
Section 6.5
176 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
Section 6.6
Proofs without premises
Not all proofs begin with the assumption of premises. This may seem odd,
but in fact it is how we use our deductive system to show that a sentence is
a logical truth. A sentence that can be proven without any premises at all is
demonstrating necessarily true. Heres a trivial example of such a proof, one that shows that
logical truth a = a b = b is a logical truth.
1. a = a = Intro
2. b = b = Intro
3. a = a b = b Intro: 1, 2
The first step of this proof is not a premise, but an application of = Intro.
You might think that any proof without premises would have to start with
this rule, since it is the only one that doesnt have to cite any supporting steps
earlier in the proof. But in fact, this is not a very representative example of
such proofs. A more typical and interesting proof without premises is the
following, which shows that (P P) is a logical truth.
1. P P
2. P Elim: 1
3. P Elim: 1
4. Intro: 2, 3
5. (P P) Intro: 14
Notice that there are no assumptions above the first horizontal Fitch bar,
indicating that the main proof has no premises. The first step of the proof is
the subproof s assumption. The subproof proceeds to derive a contradiction,
based on this assumption, thus allowing us to conclude that the negation
of the subproofs assumption follows without the need of premises. In other
words, it is a logical truth.
When we want you to prove that a sentence is a logical truth, we will use
Fitch notation to indicate that you must prove this without assuming any
premises. For example the above proof shows that the following argument
is valid:
Chapter 6
Proofs without premises / 177
(P P)
Remember
A proof without any premises shows that its conclusion is a logical truth.
Exercises
6.33 (Excluded Middle) Open the file Exercise 6.33. This contains an incomplete proof of the law
of excluded middle, P P. As it stands, the proof does not check out because its missing
some sentences, some support citations, and some rules. Fill in the missing pieces and submit
the completed proof as Proof 6.33. The proof shows that we can derive excluded middle in F
without any premises.
In the following exercises, assess whether the indicated sentence is a logical truth in the blocks language.
If so, use Fitch to construct a formal proof of the sentence from no premises (using Ana Con if
necessary, but only applied to literals). If not, use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample. (A
counterexample here will simply be a world that makes the purported conclusion false.)
6.34 6.35
(a = b Dodec(a) Dodec(b)) (a = b Dodec(a) Cube(b))
6.36 6.37
(a = b b = c a = c) (a = b b = c a = c)
6.38
6.39
Section 6.6
178 / Formal Proofs and Boolean Logic
The following sentences are all tautologies, and so should be provable in F. Although the informal proofs
are relatively simple, F makes fairly heavy going of them, since it forces us to prove even very obvious
steps. Use Fitch to construct formal proofs. You may want to build on the proof of Excluded Middle
given in Exercise 6.33. Alternatively, with the permission of your instructor, you may use Taut Con,
but only to justify an instance of Excluded Middle. The Grade Grinder will indicate whether you used
Taut Con or not.
6.40 6.41
A (A B) (A B) A B
6.42
A (B (A B))
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Conditionals
There are many logically important constructions in English besides the Bool-
ean connectives. Even if we restrict ourselves to words and phrases that con-
nect two simple indicative sentences, we still find many that go beyond the
Boolean operators. For example, besides saying:
Max is home and Claire is at the library,
and
Max is home or Claire is at the library,
we can combine these same atomic sentences in the following ways, among
others:
Max is home if Claire is at the library,
Max is home only if Claire is at the library,
Max is home if and only if Claire is at the library,
Max is not home nor is Claire at the library,
Max is home unless Claire is at the library,
Max is home even though Claire is at the library,
Max is home in spite of the fact that Claire is at the library,
Max is home just in case Claire is at the library,
Max is home whenever Claire is at the library,
Max is home because Claire is at the library.
And these are just the tip of the iceberg. There are also constructions that
combine three atomic sentences to form new sentences:
If Max is home then Claire is at the library, otherwise Claire is
concerned,
and constructions that combine four:
If Max is home then Claire is at the library, otherwise Claire is
concerned unless Carl is with him,
and so forth.
Some of these constructions are truth functional, or have important truth-
functional uses, while others do not. Recall that a connective is truth func-
tional if the truth or falsity of compound statements made with it is completely
179
180 / Conditionals
determined by the truth values of its constituents. Its meaning, in other words,
can be captured by a truth table.
non-truth-functional Fol does not include connectives that are not truth functional. This is
connectives not to say that such connectives arent important, but their meanings tend to
be vague and subject to conflicting interpretations. The decision to exclude
them is analogous to our assumption that all the predicates of fol have precise
interpretations.
Whether or not a connective in English can be, or always is, used truth
functionally is a tricky matter, about which well have more to say later in
the chapter. Of the connectives listed above, though, there is one that is very
clearly not truth functional: the connective because. This is not hard to prove.
The reason because is not truth functional is that it typically asserts some
sort of causal connection between the facts described by the constituent sen-
tences. This is why our compound sentence was false in the second situation:
the causal connection was missing.
In this chapter, we will introduce two new truth-functional connectives,
known as the material conditional and the material biconditional, both stan-
dard features of fol. It turns out that, as well show at the end of the chapter,
these new symbols do not actually increase the expressive power of fol. They
Chapter 7
Material conditional symbol: / 181
do, however, make it much easier to say and prove certain things, and so are
valuable additions to the language.
Section 7.1
Material conditional symbol:
The symbol is used to combine two sentences P and Q to form a new
sentence P Q, called a material conditional. The sentence P is called the
antecedent of the conditional, and Q is called the consequent of the conditional.
We will discuss the English counterparts of this symbol after we explain its
meaning.
Remember
Section 7.1
182 / Conditionals
this English conditional, like the material conditional, is false if P is true and
Q is false. Thus, we will translate, for example, If Max is home then Claire is
at the library as:
Home(max) Library(claire)
In this course we will always translate if. . . then. . . using , but there
are in fact many uses of the English expression that cannot be adequately
expressed with the material conditional. Consider, for example, the sentence,
If Max had been at home, then Carl would have been there too.
This sentence can be false even if Max is not in fact at home. (Suppose the
speaker mistakenly thought Carl was with Max, when in fact Claire had taken
him to the vet.) But the first-order sentence,
Home(max) Home(carl)
Other English expressions that we will translate using the material conditional
only if, provided P Q include: P only if Q, Q provided P, and Q if P. Notice in particular
that P only if Q is translated P Q, while P if Q is translated Q P. To
Chapter 7
Material conditional symbol: / 183
understand why, we need to think carefully about the dierence between only
if and if.
In English, the expression only if introduces what is called a necessary necessary condition
condition, a condition that must hold in order for something else to obtain.
For example, suppose your instructor announces at the beginning of the course
that you will pass the course only if you turn in all the homework assignments.
Your instructor is telling you that turning in the homework is a necessary
condition for passing: if you dont do it, you wont pass. But the instructor is
not guaranteeing that you will pass if you do turn in the homework: clearly,
there are other ways to fail, such as skipping the tests and getting all the
homework problems wrong.
The assertion that you will pass only if you turn in all the homework
really excludes just one possibility: that you pass but did not turn in all the
homework. In other words, P only if Q is false only when P is true and Q is
false, and this is just the case in which P Q is false.
Contrast this with the assertion that you will pass the course if you turn
in all the homework. Now this is a very dierent kettle of fish. An instructor
who makes this promise is establishing a very lax grading policy: just turn in
the homework and youll get a passing grade, regardless of how well you do
on the homework or whether you even bother to take the tests!
In English, the expression if introduces what is called a sucient condition, sucient condition
one that guarantees that something else (in this case, passing the course) will
obtain. Because of this an English sentence P if Q must be translated as
Q P. The sentence rules out Q being true (turning in the homework) and
P being false (failing the course).
Other uses of
Section 7.1
184 / Conditionals
Remember
Section 7.2
Biconditional symbol:
Our final connective is called the material biconditional symbol. Given any
sentences P and Q there is another sentence formed by connecting these by
Chapter 7
Biconditional symbol: / 185
Section 7.2
186 / Conditionals
Notice that the final column of this truth table is the same as that for
(P Q) (Q P). (See Exercise 7.3 below.) For this reason, logicians often
treat a sentence of the form P Q as an abbreviation of (P Q) (Q P).
game rule for Tarskis World also uses this abbreviation in the game. Thus, the game rule
for P Q is simple. Whenever a sentence of this form is encountered, it is
replaced by (P Q) (Q P).
Remember
2. The sentence P Q is true if and only if P and Q have the same truth
value.
Exercises
For the following exercises, use Boole to determine whether the indicated pairs of sentences are tauto-
logically equivalent. Feel free to have Boole build your reference columns and fill them out for you. Dont
forget to indicate your assessment.
7.9 (Just in case) Prove that the ordinary (nonmathematical) use of just in case does not express
. a truth-functional connective. Use as your example the sentence Max went home just in case
Carl was hungry.
7.10 (Evaluating sentences in a world) Using Tarskis World, run through Abelards Sentences, eval-
uating them in Wittgensteins World. If you make a mistake, play the game to see where you
have gone wrong. Once you have gone through all the sentences, go back and make all the false
ones true by changing one or more names used in the sentence. Submit your edited sentences
as Sentences 7.10.
Chapter 7
Biconditional symbol: / 187
7.11 (Describing a world) Launch Tarskis World and choose Hide Labels from the World menu.
Then, with the labels hidden, open Montagues World. In this world, each object has a name,
and no object has more than one name. Start a new sentence file where you will describe some
features of this world. Check each of your sentences to see that it is indeed a sentence and that
it is true in this world.
1. Notice that if c is a tetrahedron, then a is not a tetrahedron. (Remember, in this world
each object has exactly one name.) Use your first sentence to express this fact.
2. However, note that the same is true of b and d. That is, if b is a tetrahedron, then d
isnt. Use your second sentence to express this.
3. Finally, observe that if b is a tetrahedron, then c isnt. Express this.
4. Notice that if a is a cube and b is a dodecahedron, then a is to the left of b. Use your
next sentence to express this fact.
5. Use your next sentence to express the fact that if b and c are both cubes, then they
are in the same row but not in the same column.
6. Use your next sentence to express the fact that b is a tetrahedron only if it is small.
[Check this sentence carefully. If your sentence evaluates as false, then youve got the
arrow pointing in the wrong direction.]
7. Next, express the fact that if a and d are both cubes, then one is to the left of the
other. [Note: You will need to use a disjunction to express the fact that one is to the
left of the other.]
8. Notice that d is a cube if and only if it is either medium or large. Express this.
9. Observe that if b is neither to the right nor left of d, then one of them is a tetrahedron.
Express this observation.
10. Finally, express the fact that b and c are the same size if and only if one is a tetrahedron
and the other is a dodecahedron.
Save your sentences as Sentences 7.11. Now choose Show Labels from the World menu.
Verify that all of your sentences are indeed true. When verifying the first three, pay particular
attention to the truth values of the various constituents. Notice that sometimes the conditional
has a false antecedent and sometimes a true consequent. What it never has is a true antecedent
and a false consequent. In each of these three cases, play the game committed to true. Make
sure you understand why the game proceeds as it does.
7.12 (Translation) Translate the following English sentences into fol. Your translations will use all
of the propositional connectives.
1. If a is a tetrahedron then it is in front of d.
2. a is to the left of or right of d only if its a cube.
3. c is between either a and e or a and d.
4. c is to the right of a, provided it (i.e., c) is small.
Section 7.2
188 / Conditionals
Save your list of sentences as Sentences 7.12. Before submitting the file, you should complete
Exercise 7.13.
7.13 (Checking your translations) Open Bolzanos World. Notice that all the English sentences from
Exercise 7.12 are true in this world. Thus, if your translations are accurate, they will also be
true in this world. Check to see that they are. If you made any mistakes, go back and fix them.
Remember that even if one of your sentences comes out true in Bolzanos World, it does not
mean that it is a proper translation of the corresponding English sentence. If the translation is
correct, it will have the same truth value as the English sentence in every world. So lets check
your translations in some other worlds.
Open Wittgensteins World. Here we see that the English sentences 3, 5, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14,
and 20 are false, while the rest are true. Check to see that the same holds of your translations.
If not, correct your translations (and make sure they are still true in Bolzanos World).
Next open Leibnizs World. Here half the English sentences are true (1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14,
18, and 20) and half false (3, 5, 8, 9, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, and 19). Check to see that the same
holds of your translations. If not, correct your translations.
Finally, open Venns World. In this world, all of the English sentences are false. Check to
see that the same holds of your translations and correct them if necessary.
There is no need to submit any files for this exercise, but dont forget to submit Sentences
7.12.
Chapter 7
Biconditional symbol: / 189
7.14 (Figuring out sizes and shapes) Open Eulers Sentences. The nine sentences in this file uniquely
determine the shapes and sizes of blocks a, b, and c. See if you can figure out the solution just
by thinking about what the sentences mean and using the informal methods of proof youve
already studied. When youve figured it out, submit a world in which all of the sentences are
true.
7.15 (More sizes and shapes) Start a new sentence file and use it to translate the following English
sentences.
1. If a is a tetrahedron, then b is also a tetrahedron.
2. c is a tetrahedron if b is.
3. a and c are both tetrahedra only if at least one of them is large.
4. a is a tetrahedron but c isnt large.
5. If c is small and d is a dodecahedron, then d is neither large nor small.
6. c is medium only if none of d, e, and f are cubes.
7. d is a small dodecahedron unless a is small.
8. e is large just in case it is a fact that d is large if and only if f is.
9. d and e are the same size.
10. d and e are the same shape.
11. f is either a cube or a dodecahedron, if it is large.
12. c is larger than e only if b is larger than c.
Save these sentences as Sentences 7.15. Then see if you can figure out the sizes and shapes of
a, b, c, d, e, and f . You will find it helpful to approach this problem systematically, filling in
the following table as you reason about the sentences:
a b c d e f
Shape:
Size:
When you have filled in the table, use it to guide you in building a world in which the twelve
English sentences are true. Verify that your translations are true in this world as well. Submit
both your sentence file and your world file.
7.16 (Name that object) Open Sherlocks World and Sherlocks Sentences. You will notice that none
of the objects in this world has a name. Your task is to assign the names a, b, and c in such a
way that all the sentences in the list come out true. Submit the modified world as World 7.16.
7.17 (Building a world) Open Boolos Sentences. Submit a world in which all five sentences in this
Section 7.2
190 / Conditionals
7.18 Using the symbols introduced in Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following sentences into fol.
Submit your translations as a sentence file.
1. If Claire gave Folly to Max at 2:03 then Folly belonged to her at 2:00 and to him at
2:05.
2. Max fed Folly at 2:00 pm, but if he gave her to Claire then, Folly was not hungry five
minutes later.
3. If neither Max nor Claire fed Folly at 2:00, then she was hungry.
4. Max was angry at 2:05 only if Claire fed either Folly or Scruy five minutes before.
5. Max is a student if and only if Claire is not.
7.19 Using Table 1.2 on page 30, translate the following into colloquial English.
. 1. (Fed(max, folly, 2:00) Fed(claire, folly, 2:00)) Pet(folly)
2. Fed(max, folly, 2:30) Fed(claire, scruy, 2:00)
3. Hungry(folly, 2:00) Hungry(scruy, 2:00)
4. (Hungry(folly, 2:00) Hungry(scruy, 2:00))
7.20 Translate the following into fol as best you can. Explain any predicates and function symbols
. you use, and any shortcomings in your first-order translations.
1. If Abe can fool Stephen, surely he can fool Ulysses.
2. If you scratch my back, Ill scratch yours.
3. France will sign the treaty only if Germany does.
4. If Tweedledee gets a party, so will Tweedledum, and vice versa.
5. If John and Mary went to the concert together, they must like each other.
7.21 (The monkey principle) One of the stranger uses of if. . . then. . . in English is as a roundabout
|. way to express negation. Suppose a friend of yours says If Keanu Reeves is a great actor, then
Im a monkeys uncle. This is simply a way of denying the antecedent of the conditional, in
this case that Keanu Reeves is a great actor. Explain why this works. Your explanation should
appeal to the truth table for , but it will have to go beyond that. Turn in your explanation
and also submit a Boole table showing that A is equivalent to A.
Section 7.3
Conversational implicature
In translating from English to fol, there are many problematic cases. For
example, many students resist translating a sentence like Max is home unless
Claire is at the library as:
Library(claire) Home(max)
Chapter 7
Conversational implicature / 191
These students usually think that the meaning of this English sentence would
be more accurately captured by the biconditional claim:
Library(claire) Home(max)
The reason the latter seems natural is that when we assert the English sen-
tence, there is some suggestion that if Claire is at at the library, then Max is
not at home.
To resolve problematic cases like this, it is often useful to distinguish be-
tween the truth conditions of a sentence, and other things that in some sense
follow from the assertion of the sentence. To take an obvious case, suppose
someone asserts the sentence It is a lovely day. One thing you may conclude
from this is that the speaker understands English. This is not part of what
the speaker said, however, but part of what can be inferred from his saying it.
The truth or falsity of the claim has nothing to do with the speakers linguistic
abilities.
The philosopher H. P. Grice developed a theory of what he called con-
versational implicature to help sort out the genuine truth conditions of a
sentence from other conclusions we may draw from its assertion. These other
conclusions are what Grice called implicatures. We wont go into this theory conversational
in detail, but knowing a little bit about it can be a great aid in translation, implicatures
so we present an introduction to Grices theory.
Suppose we have an English sentence S that someone asserts, and we
are trying to decide whether a particular conclusion we draw is part of the
meaning of S or, instead, one of its implicatures. Grice pointed out that if
the conclusion is part of the meaning, then it cannot be cancelled by some cancelling implicatures
further elaboration by the speaker. Thus, for example, the conclusion that
Max is home is part of the meaning of an assertion of Max and Claire are
home, so we cant cancel this conclusion by saying Max and Claire are home,
but Max isnt home. We would simply be contradicting ourselves.
Contrast this with the speaker who said It is a lovely day. Suppose he
had gone on to say, perhaps reading haltingly from a phrase book: Do you
speak any French? In that case, the suggestion that the speaker understands
English is eectively cancelled.
A more illuminating use of Grices cancellability test concerns the expres-
sion either. . . or. . . . Recall that we claimed that this should be translated into
fol as an inclusive disjunction, using . We can now see that the suggestion
that this phrase expresses exclusive disjunction is generally just a conversa-
tional implicature. For example, if the waiter says You can have either soup or
salad, there is a strong suggestion that you cannot have both. But it is clear
that this is just an implicature, since the waiter could, without contradicting
Section 7.3
192 / Conditionals
himself, go on to say And you can have both, if you want. Had the original
either. . . or. . . expressed the exclusive disjunction, this would be like saying
You can have soup or salad but not both, and you can have both, if you want.
Lets go back now to the sentence Max is at home unless Claire is at the
library. Earlier we denied that the correct translation was
Library(claire) Home(max)
Library(claire) Home(max)
Library(claire) Home(max)
Remember
Chapter 7
Truth-functional completeness / 193
Exercises
7.22 Suppose Claire asserts the sentence Max managed to get Carl home. Does this logically imply,
. or just conversationally implicate, that it was hard to get Carl home? Justify your answer.
7.23 Suppose Max asserts the sentence We can walk to the movie or we can drive. Does his assertion
. logically imply, or merely implicate, that we cannot both walk and drive? How does this dier
from the soup or salad example?
7.24 Consider the sentence Max is home in spite of the fact that Claire is at the library. What would
. be the best translation of this sentence into fol? Clearly, whether you would be inclined to use
this sentence is not determined simply by the truth values of the atomic sentences Max is home
and Claire is at the library. This may be because in spite of the fact is, like because, a non-truth-
functional connective, or because it carries, like but, additional conversational implicatures. (See
our discussion of because earlier in this chapter and the discussion of but in Chapter 3.) Which
explanation do you think is right? Justify your answer.
Section 7.4
Truth-functional completeness
We now have at our disposal five truth-functional connectives, one unary
(), and four binary (, , , ). Should we introduce any more? Though
weve seen a few English expressions that cant be expressed in fol, like
because, these have not been truth functional. Weve also run into others, like
neither. . . nor. . . , that are truth functional, but which we can easily express
using the existing connectives of fol.
The question we will address in the current section is whether there are any
truth-functional connectives that we need to add to our language. Is it possible
that we might encounter an English construction that is truth functional but
which we cannot express using the symbols we have introduced so far? If so,
this would be an unfortunate limitation of our language.
How can we possibly answer this question? Well, lets begin by thinking
about binary connectives, those that apply to two sentences to make a third.
How many binary truth-functional connectives are possible? If we think about
the possible truth tables for such connectives, we can compute the total num-
ber. First, since we are dealing with binary connectives, there are four rows
in each table. Each row can be assigned either true or false, so there are
24 = 16 ways of doing this. For example, here is the table that captures the
truth function expressed by neither. . . nor. . . .
Section 7.4
194 / Conditionals
P Q Neither P nor Q
t t F
t f F
f t F
f f T
Since there are only 16 dierent ways of filling in the final column of such
a table, there are only 16 binary truth functions, and so 16 possible binary
truth-functional connectives. We could look at each of these tables in turn
and show how to express the truth function with existing connectives, just as
we captured neither P nor Q with (P Q). But there is a more general and
systematic way to show this.
Suppose we are thinking about introducing a binary truth-functional con-
nective, say . It will have a truth table like the following, with one of the
values true or false in each row.
P Q PQ
t t 1st value
t f 2nd value
f t 3rd value
f f 4th value
If all four values are false, then we can clearly express P Q with the
sentence P P Q Q. So suppose at least one of the values is true.
How can we express P Q? One way would be this. Let C1 , . . . , C4 stand for
the following four conjunctions:
C1 = (P Q)
C2 = (P Q)
C3 = (P Q)
C4 = (P Q)
Notice that sentence C1 will be true if the truth values of P and Q are as
specified in the first row of the truth table, and that if the values of P and Q
are anything else, then C1 will be false. Similarly with C2 and the second row
of the truth table, and so forth. To build a sentence that gets the value true
in exactly the same rows as P Q, all we need do is take the disjunction of the
appropriate Cs. For example, if P Q is true in rows 2 and 4, then C2 C4 is
equivalent to this sentence.
What this shows is that all binary truth functions are already expressible
using just the connectives , , and . In fact, it shows that they can be ex-
pressed using sentences in disjunctive normal form, as described in Chapter 4.
Chapter 7
Truth-functional completeness / 195
Its easy to see that a similar procedure allows us to express all possible
unary truth functions. A unary connective, say , will have a truth table like
this:
P P
t 1st value
f 2nd value
If both of the values under P are false, then we can express it using the
sentence P P. Otherwise, we can express P as a disjunction of one or
more of the following:
C1 = P
C2 = P
C1 will be included as one of the disjuncts if the first value is true, and C2
will be included if the second value is true. (Of course, in only one case will
there be more than one disjunct.)
Once we understand how this procedure is working, we see that it will
apply equally well to truth-functional connectives of any arity. Suppose, for
example, that we want to express the ternary truth-functional connective
defined by the following truth table:
P Q R (P, Q, R)
t t t T
t t f T
t f t F
t f f F
f t t T
f t f F
f f t T
f f f F
(P Q R) (P Q R) (P Q R) (P Q R)
Section 7.4
196 / Conditionals
What this means is that we could get rid of all the occurrences of in our
sentences in favor of and . Alternatively, we could get rid of in favor
of and , as youll see in Exercise 7.25. Of course either way, the resulting
sentences would be much longer and harder to understand.
We could in fact be even more economical in our choice of connectives.
Suppose we used P Q to express neither P nor Q. It turns out that the
connective is, all by itself, truth-functionally complete. To see this, notice
that P can be expressed as:
PP
(P P) (Q Q)
which says neither not P nor not Q. Thus in theory we could use just this one
truth-functional connective and express anything we can now express using
our current five.
disadvantages of There are two disadvantages to economizing on connectives. First, as weve
economy already said, the fewer connectives we have, the harder it is to understand our
sentences. But even worse, our proofs become much more complicated. For
example, if we always expressed in terms of and , a single application of
the simple rule of Intro would have to be replaced by two uses of Intro,
Chapter 7
Truth-functional completeness / 197
one use of Elim, and one use of Intro (see Exercise 7.26). This is why
we havent skimped on connectives.
Remember
Exercises
7.25 (Replacing , , and ) Use Tarskis World to open the file Sheers Sentences. In this file,
you will find the following sentences in the odd-numbered positions:
1. Tet(a) Small(a)
3. Tet(a) Small(a)
5. Tet(a) Small(a)
7. (Cube(b) Cube(c)) (Small(b) Small(c))
In each even-numbered slot, enter a sentence that is equivalent to the one above it, but which
uses only the connectives and . Before submitting your solution file, you might want to try
out your sentences in several worlds to make sure the new sentences have the expected truth
values.
7.26 (Basic versus defined symbols in proofs) Treating a symbol as basic, with its own rules, or as a
defined symbol, without its own rules, makes a big dierence to the complexity of proofs. Use
Fitch to open the file Exercise 7.26. In this file, you are asked to construct a proof of (A B)
from the premises A and B. A proof of the equivalent sentence A B would of course take a
single step.
7.27 (Simplifying if. . . then. . . else) Assume that P, Q, and R are atomic sentences. See if you can
simplify the sentence we came up with to express (P, Q, R) (if P then Q, else R), so that it
becomes a disjunction of two sentences, each of which is a conjunction of two literals. Submit
your solution as a Tarskis World sentence file.
Section 7.4
198 / Conditionals
7.28 (Expressing another ternary connective) Start a new sentence file using Tarskis World. Use the
method we have developed to express the ternary connective defined in the following truth
table, and enter this as the first sentence in your file. Then see if you can simplify the result
as much as possible. Enter the simplified form as your second sentence. (This sentence should
have no more than two occurrences each of P, Q, and R, and no more than six occurrences of
the Boolean connectives, , and .)
P Q R (P, Q, R)
t t t T
t t f T
t f t T
t f f F
f t t F
f t f T
f f t T
f f f T
7.29 (Sheer stroke) Another binary connective that is truth-functionally complete on its own is
. called the Sheer stroke, named after H. M. Sheer, one of the logicians who discovered and
studied it. It is also known as nand by analogy with nor. Here is its truth table:
P Q P|Q
t t F
t f T
f t T
f f T
Show how to express P, P Q, and P Q using the Sheer stroke. (We remind you that
nowadays, the symbol | has been appropriated as an alternative for . Dont let that confuse
you.)
7.30 (Putting monkeys to work) Suppose we have the single binary connective , plus the symbol
. for absurdity . Using just these expressions, see if you can find a way to express P, P Q,
and P Q. [Hint: Dont forget what you learned in Exercise 7.21.]
7.31 (Another non-truth-functional connective) Show that truth value at a particular time of the
. sentence Max is home whenever Claire is at the library is not determined by the truth values
of the atomic sentences Max is home and Claire is at the library at that same time. That is,
show that whenever is not truth functional.
Chapter 7
Alternative notation / 199
7.32 (Exclusive disjunction) Suppose we had introduced to express exclusive disjunction. Is the
. following a valid method of proof for this connective?
PQ
P
..
.
S
Q
..
.
T
ST
If you say yes, justify your answer; if no, give an example where the method sanctions an
invalid inference.
State valid introduction and elimination rules for using the same format we use to state
the introduction and elimination rules of F. You may need more than one of each.
Section 7.5
Alternative notation
As with the other truth-functional connectives, there are alternative notations
for the material conditional and biconditional. The most common alternative
to P Q is P Q. Polish notation for the conditional is Cpq. The most com-
mon alternative to P Q is P Q. The Polish notation for the biconditional
is Epq.
Remember
Section 7.5
Chapter 8
One thing the theorem on page 196 tells us is that introducing the material
conditional and biconditional symbols did not increase the expressive power of
fol. Since and can be defined using the Boolean connectives, we could
always eliminate them from claims or proofs by means of these definitions.
Thus, for example, if we wanted to prove P Q we could just prove P Q,
and then use the definition. In practice, though, this is a terrible idea. It is far
more natural to use rules that involve these symbols directly, and the resulting
proofs are simpler and easier to understand.1
The material conditional, in particular, is an extremely useful symbol to
have. For example, many claims and theorems that we will run across can
only be expressed naturally using the conditional. In fact, quite a few of the
examples weve already used are more naturally stated as conditional claims.
Thus in an earlier exercise we asked you to prove Even(n m) from the premise
Odd(n + m). But really, the fact we were interested in was that, no matter
what numbers n and m you pick, the following conditional claim is true:
Odd(n + m) Even(n m)
Given the importance of conditional claims, and the frequency youll en-
counter them, we need to learn how to prove these claims.
Section 8.1
Informal methods of proof
As before, we will first look at informal proofs involving conditionals and later
incorporate the key methods into the system F. Among the informal methods,
we distinguish simple valid steps from more important methods of proof.
Valid steps
modus ponens or The most common valid proof step involving goes by the Latin name modus
conditional elimination ponens, or by the English conditional elimination. The rule says that if you
1 InExercise 8.38 we ask you to construct proofs of (P Q) P and the equivalent
(P Q) P, so that you can see for yourself how much simpler the first is than the second.
200
Informal methods of proof / 201
have established both P Q and P, then you can infer Q. This rule is obvi-
ously valid, as a review of the truth table for shows, since if P Q and P
are both true, then so must be Q.
There is a similar proof step for the biconditional, since the biconditional
is logically equivalent to a conjunction of two conditionals. If you have estab-
lished either P Q or Q P, then if you can establish P, you can infer Q. biconditional
This is called biconditional elimination. elimination
In addition to these simple rules, there are a number of useful equivalences
involving our new symbols. One of the most important is known as the Law of
Contraposition. It states that P Q is logically equivalent to Q P. This contraposition
latter conditional is known as the contrapositive of the original conditional. It
is easy to see that the original conditional is equivalent to the contrapositive,
since the latter is false if and only if Q is true and P is false, which is
to say, when P is true and Q is false. Contraposition is a particularly useful
equivalence since it is often easier to prove the contrapositive of a conditional
than the conditional itself. Well see an example of this in a moment.
Here are some logical equivalences to bear in mind, beginning with contra-
position. Make sure you understand them all and see why they are equivalent.
Use Boole to construct truth tables for any you dont immediately see.
PQ Q P
PQ P Q
(P Q) P Q
PQ (P Q) (Q P)
PQ (P Q) (P Q)
Remember
3. Contraposition: P Q Q P
Section 8.1
202 / The Logic of Conditionals
Chapter 8
Informal methods of proof / 203
Did you get lost? This proof has a pretty complicated structure, since we
first assumed Even(n2 ) for the purpose of conditional proof, but then immedi-
ately assumed Even(n) to get an indirect proof of Even(n). The contradiction
that we arrived at was Even(n2 ), which contradicted our first assumption.
Proofs of this sort are fairly common, and this is why it is often easier to
prove the contrapositive of a conditional. The contrapositive of our original
claim is this:
Even(n) Even(n2 )
Lets look at the proof of this contrapositive.
Proof: To prove Even(n) Even(n2 ), we begin by assuming
Even(n), i.e., that n is odd. Then we can express n as 2m + 1,
for some m. But then we see that:
n2 = (2m + 1)2
= 4m2 + 4m + 1
= 2(2m2 + 2m) + 1
But this shows that n2 is also odd, hence Even(n2 ). Thus, by con-
ditional proof, we have established Even(n) Even(n2 ).
By proving the contrapositive, we avoided the need for an indirect proof
inside the conditional proof. This makes the proof easier to understand, and
since the contrapositive is logically equivalent to our original claim, our second
proof could serve as a proof of the original claim as well.
The method of conditional proof is used extensively in everyday reason-
ing. Some years ago Bill was trying to decide whether to take English 301,
Postmodernism. His friend Sarah claimed that if Bill takes Postmodernism,
he will not get into medical school. Sarahs argument, when challenged by Bill,
took the form of a conditional proof, combined with a proof by cases.
Suppose you take Postmodernism. Then either you will adopt the
postmodern disdain for rationality or you wont. If you dont, you will
fail the class, which will lower your GPA so much that you will not get
into medical school. But if you do adopt the postmodern contempt
toward rationality, you wont be able to pass organic chemistry, and
so will not get into medical school. So in either case, you will not get
into medical school. Hence, if you take Postmodernism, you wont
get into medical school.
Unfortunately for Bill, he had already succumbed to postmodernism, and
so rejected Sarahs argument. He went ahead and took the course, failed chem-
istry, and did not get into medical school. Hes now a wealthy lobbyist in
Washington. Sarah is an executive in the computer industry in California.
Section 8.1
204 / The Logic of Conditionals
Proving biconditionals
Proof: Rather than prove all six biconditionals, we prove that (3)
(2) (1) (3). Assume (3). Now clearly, if n2 is divisible by 4, then
Chapter 8
Informal methods of proof / 205
When you apply this method, you should look for simple or obvious impli-
cations, like (1) (3) above, or implications that youve already established,
like (2) (1) above, and try to build them into your cycle of conditionals.
Remember
Exercises
8.1 In the following list we give a number of inference patterns, some of which are valid, some
. invalid. For each pattern, decide whether you think it is valid and say so. Later, we will return
to these patterns and ask you to give formal proofs for the valid ones and counterexamples for
the invalid ones. But for now, just assess their validity.
1. Arming the Consequent: From A B and B, infer A.
2. Modus Tollens: From A B and B, infer A.
3. Strengthening the Antecedent: From B C, infer (A B) C.
4. Weakening the Antecedent: From B C, infer (A B) C.
5. Strengthening the Consequent: From A B, infer A (B C).
6. Weakening the Consequent: From A B, infer A (B C).
7. Constructive Dilemma: From A B, A C, and B D, infer C D.
8. Transitivity of the Biconditional: From A B and B C, infer A C.
8.2 Open Conditional Sentences. Suppose that the sentences in this file are your premises. Now
|. consider the five sentences listed below. Some of these sentences are consequences of these
premises, some are not. For those that are consequences, give informal proofs and turn them
Section 8.1
206 / The Logic of Conditionals
in to your instructor. For those that are not consequences, submit counterexample worlds in
which the premises are true but the conclusion false. Name the counterexamples World 8.2.x,
where x is the number of the sentence.
1. Tet(e)
2. Tet(c) Tet(e)
3. Tet(c) Larger(f, e)
4. Tet(c) LeftOf(c, f)
5. Dodec(e) Smaller(e, f)
The following arguments are all valid. Turn in informal proofs of their validity. You may find it helpful
to translate the arguments into fol before trying to give proofs, though thats not required. Explicitly
note any inferences using modus ponens, biconditional elimination, or conditional proof.
8.3 The unicorn, if it is not mythical, is 8.4 The unicorn, if horned, is elusive and
. a mammal, but if it is mythical, it is . dangerous.
immortal. If elusive or mythical, the unicorn is
If the unicorn is either immortal or a rare.
mammal, it is horned. If a mammal, the unicorn is not rare.
The unicorn, if horned, is magical.
The unicorn, if horned, is not a
The unicorn is magical. mammal.
Chapter 8
Informal methods of proof / 207
8.10 Open Between Sentences. Determine whether this set of sentences is satisfiable or not. If it
|. is, submit a world in which all the sentences are true. If not, give an informal proof that the
sentences are inconsistent. That is, assume all of them and derive a contradiction.
8.11 Analyze the structure of the informal proof in support of the following claim: If the U.S. does
. not cut back on its use of oil soon, parts of California will be flooded within 50 years. Are there
weak points in the argument? What premises are implicitly assumed in the proof? Are they
plausible?
Proof: Suppose the U.S. does not cut back on its oil use soon. Then it will be unable
to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions substantially in the next few years. But then
the countries of China, India and Brazil will refuse to join in eorts to curb carbon
dioxide emissions. As these countries develop without such eorts, the emission of
carbon dioxide will get much worse, and so the greenhouse eect will accelerate. As a
result the sea will get warmer, ice will melt, and the sea level will rise. In which case,
low lying coastal areas in California will be subject to flooding within 50 years. So if
we do not cut back on our oil use, parts of California will be flooded within 50 years.
8.12 Describe an everyday example of reasoning that uses the method of conditional proof.
.
8.13 Prove: Odd(n + m) Even(n m). 8.14 Prove: Irrational(x) Irrational( x).
. [Hint: Compare this with Exercise 5.24 . [Hint: It is easier to prove the contra-
on page 141.] positive.]
8.15 Prove that the following conditions on the natural number n are all equivalent. Use as few
. conditional proofs as possible.
1. n is divisible by 3
2. n2 is divisible by 3
3. n2 is divisible by 9
4. n3 is divisible by 3
5. n3 is divisible by 9
6. n3 is divisible by 27
Section 8.1
208 / The Logic of Conditionals
Section 8.2
Formal rules of proof for and
We now turn to the formal analogues of the methods of proof involving the
conditional and biconditional. Again, we incorporate an introduction and elim-
ination rule for each connective into F.
PQ
..
.
P
..
.
Q
P
..
.
Q
PQ
Chapter 8
Formal rules of proof for and / 209
You try it
................................................................
4. Move the slider to the step containing the goal sentence A C. Justify
this step using the rule Intro, citing the subproof for support. Check
this step.
5. Now we need to go back and fill in the subproof. Add a step between the
two steps of the subproof. Enter A B. Justify this step using Intro,
citing the assumption of the subproof.
6. Now move the slider to the last step of the subproof. Justify this step using
the rule Elim, citing the premise and the step you just proved.
7. Verify that your proof checks out, and save it as Proof Conditional 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Section 8.2
210 / The Logic of Conditionals
1. A
2. A
3. Intro: 1, 2
4. A Intro: 23
5. A A Intro: 14
Notice that the subproof here is identical to the original proof given on
page 159. We simply embedded that proof in our new proof and applied con-
ditional introduction to derive A A.
The rule Elim does not care in which order you cite the support sentences.
The rule Intro does not insist that the consequent be at the last step of
the cited subproof, though it usually is. Also, the assumption step might be
the only step in the subproof, as in a proof of a sentence of the form P P.
default uses of The default applications of the conditional rules work exactly as you would
conditional rules expect. If you cite supports of the form indicated in the rule statements, Fitch
will fill in the appropriate conclusion for you.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Conditional 2. Look at the goal to see what sentence we are
trying to prove. Then focus on each step in succession and check the step.
On the empty steps, try to predict what default Fitch will supply.
2. When you are finished, make sure you understand the proof. Save the
checked proof as Proof Conditional 2.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
You can use the Add Support Steps command when you are using the
Intro rule, and have an implication at the focus step. Fitch will insert a
subproof as support. The antecedant of the implication will be the assumption
of the subproof, and the consequent will appear at the last line of the subproof.
You cannot use Add Support Steps with Elim.
Chapter 8
Formal rules of proof for and / 211
The rules for the biconditional are just what you would expect, given the rules
for the conditional. The elimination rule for the biconditional can be stated
schematically as follows:
P Q (or Q P)
..
.
P
..
.
Q
This means that you can conclude Q if you can establish P and either of the
biconditionals indicated.
The introduction rule for the biconditional P Q requires that you give
two subproofs, one showing that Q follows from P, and one showing that P
follows from Q:
P
..
.
Q
Q
..
.
P
PQ
Section 8.2
212 / The Logic of Conditionals
1. P
2. P
3. Intro: 1, 2
4. P Intro: 23
5. P
6. P Elim: 5
7. P P Intro: 14, 56
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Conditional 3. In this file, you are asked to prove, without
premises, the law of contraposition:
(P Q) (Q P)
2. Start your proof by sketching in the two subproofs that you know youll
have to prove, plus the desired conclusion. Your partial proof will look like
this:
1. P Q
2. Q P Rule?
3. Q P
4. P Q Rule?
5. (P Q) (Q P) Intro: 12, 34
Chapter 8
Formal rules of proof for and / 213
3. Now that you have the overall structure, start filling in the first subproof.
Since the goal of that subproof is a conditional claim, sketch in a condi-
tional proof that would give you that claim:
1. P Q
2. Q
3. P Rule?
4. Q P Intro: 23
5. Q P
6. P Q Rule?
7. (P Q) (Q P) Intro: 14, 56
1. P Q
2. Q
3. P
4. Q Elim: 1, 3
5. Intro: 4, 2
6. P Intro: 35
7. Q P Intro: 26
8. Q P
9. P Q Rule?
10. (P Q) (Q P) Intro: 17, 89
5. This completes the first subproof. Luckily, you sketched in the second
subproof so you know what you want to do next. You should be able to
finish the second subproof on your own, since it is almost identical to the
first.
Section 8.2
214 / The Logic of Conditionals
Exercises
8.17 If you skipped any of the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files
Proof Conditional 1, Proof Conditional 2, and Proof Conditional 3.
In the following exercises we return to the patterns of inference discussed in Exercise 8.1. Some of
these are valid, some invalid. For each valid pattern, construct a formal proof in Fitch. For each invalid
pattern, give a counterexample using Tarskis World. To give a counterexample in these cases, you will
have to come up with sentences of the blocks language that fit the pattern, and a world that makes
those specific premises true and the conclusion false. Submit both the world and the sentence file. In the
sentence file, list the premises first and the conclusion last.
8.26 8.27
P (Q P) (P (Q R)) ((P Q) R)
Chapter 8
Formal rules of proof for and / 215
8.28 P P 8.29
(P Q) (P Q)
8.30
(P Q) (P Q)
The following arguments are translations of those given in Exercises 8.38.9. (For simplicity we have
assumed the unicorn refers to a specific unicorn named Charlie. This is less than ideal, but the best we
can do without quantifiers.) Use Fitch to formalize the proofs you gave of their validity. You will need
to use Ana Con to introduce in two of your proofs.
Section 8.2
216 / The Logic of Conditionals
8.38 Use Fitch to give formal proofs of both (P Q) P and the equivalent sentence (P Q) P.
(You will find the exercise files in Exercise 8.38.1 and Exercise 8.38.2.) Do you see why it is
convenient to include in fol, rather than define it in terms of the Boolean connectives?
Section 8.3
Soundness and completeness
We have now introduced formal rules for all of our truth-functional connec-
tives. Lets step back for a minute and ask two important questions about the
formal system F. The questions get at two desirable properties of a deductive
system, which logicians call soundness and completeness. Dont be confused
by the names, however. These uses of sound and complete are dierent from
their use in the notions of a sound argument and a truth-functionally complete
set of connectives.
Soundness
We intend our formal system F to be a correct system of deduction in the
sense that any argument that can be proven valid in F should be genuinely
valid. The first question that we will ask, then, is whether we have succeeded
soundness of a in this goal. Does the system F allow us to construct proofs only of genuinely
deductive system valid arguments? This is known as the soundness question for the deductive
system F.
The answer to this question may seem obvious, but it deserves a closer look.
After all, consider the rule of inference suggested in Exercise 7.32 on page 199.
Probably, when you first looked at this rule, it seemed pretty reasonable, even
though on closer inspection you realized it was not (or maybe you got the
problem wrong). How can we be sure that something similar might not be the
case for one of our ocial rules? Maybe there is a flaw in one of them but we
just havent thought long enough or hard enough to discover it.
Or maybe there are problems that go beyond the individual rules, some-
thing about the way the rules interact. Consider for example the following
Chapter 8
Soundness and completeness / 217
argument:
(Happy(carl) Happy(scruy))
Happy(carl)
We know this argument isnt valid since it is clearly possible for the premise to
be true and the conclusion false. But how do we know that the rules of proof
weve introduced do not allow some very complicated and ingenious proof
of the conclusion from the premise? After all, there is no way to examine all
possible proofs and make sure there isnt one with this premise and conclusion:
there are infinitely many proofs.
To answer our question, we need to make it more precise. We have seen that
there is a certain vagueness in the notion of logical consequence. The concept
of tautological consequence was introduced as a precise approximation of the
informal notion. One way to make our question more precise is to ask whether
the rules for the truth-functional connectives allow us to prove only arguments
that are tautologically valid. This question leaves out the issue of whether the
identity rules are legitimate, but we will address that question later.
Lets introduce some new symbols to make it easier to express the claim
we want to investigate. We will use FT to refer to the portion of our deductive FT
system that contains the introduction and elimination rules for , , , , ,
and . You can think of the subscript t as standing for either tautology or
truth-functional. We will also write P1 , . . . , Pn T S to indicate that there T
is a formal proof in FT of S from premises P1 , . . . , Pn . (The symbol is
commonly used in logic to indicate the provability of whats on the right from
whats on the left. If you have trouble remembering what this symbol means,
just think of it as a tiny Fitch bar.) We can now state our claim as follows.
Section 8.3
218 / The Logic of Conditionals
at the main level of p, then the only assumptions in force are the
premises P1 , . . . , Pn . So S is a tautological consequence of P1 , . . . , Pn .
To prove this claim we will use proof by contradiction. Suppose that
there is a step in p containing a sentence that is not a tautological
consequence of the assumptions in force at that step. Call this an
invalid step. The idea of our proof is to look at the first invalid step
in p and show that none of the twelve rules of FT could have justified
that step. In other words, we will apply proof by cases to show that,
no matter which rule of FT was applied at the invalid step, we get a
contradiction. (Actually, we will only look at three of the cases and
leave the remaining rules as exercises.) This allows us to conclude
that there can be no invalid steps in proofs in FT .
..
.
Q
..
.
R
..
.
QR
..
.
Chapter 8
Soundness and completeness / 219
A1
..
.
QR
..
.
A2
..
.
Q
..
.
A3
..
.
R
..
.
Section 8.3
220 / The Logic of Conditionals
Elim: Suppose the first invalid step derives the sentence Q from
. Since this is the first invalid step, must be a tautological con-
sequence of the assumptions in force at . By the same considera-
tions as in the first case, the assumptions in force at are also in
force at Q. Hence is a tautological consequence of the assumptions
A1 , . . . , Ak in force at Q. But the only way that this can be so is for
A1 , . . . , Ak to be tt-contradictory. In other words, there are no rows
in which all of A1 , . . . , Ak come out true. But then Q is vacuously a
tautological consequence of A1 , . . . , Ak .
Chapter 8
Soundness and completeness / 221
a=a b=b
???
a) Tet
et( (
Provable in FT
a)
Tautologies
Logical truths
Figure 8.1: The soundness theorem for FT tells us that only tautologies are
provable (without premises) in FT .
Completeness
Sometimes, in doing an exercise on formal proofs, you may have despaired of
finding a proof, even though you could see that the conclusion followed from
the premises. Our second question addresses this concern. Does our deductive completeness of a
system allow us to prove everything we should be able to prove? deductive system
Of course, this raises the question of what we should be able to prove,
which again confronts us with the vagueness of the notion of logical conse-
quence. But given the soundness theorem, we know that the most FT will let
us prove are tautological consequences. So we can state our question more pre-
cisely: Can we convince ourselves that given any premises P1 , . . . , Pn and any
tautological consequence S of these premises, our deductive system FT allows
us to construct a proof of S from P1 , . . . , Pn ? Or could there be tautological
consequences of some set of premises that are just plain out of the reach of the
Section 8.3
222 / The Logic of Conditionals
a=a b=b
t(a) Tet(a
Te )
Provable in FT
Tautologies
Logical truths
Figure 8.2: Completeness and soundness of FT tells us that all and only tau-
tologies are provable (without premises) in FT .
deductive system FT ? The next theorem assures us that this cannot happen.
completeness of FT Theorem (Completeness of FT ) If a sentence S is a tautological consequence
of P1 , . . . , Pn , then P1 , . . . , Pn T S.
The proof of this result is quite a bit more complicated than the proof of
the Soundness Theorem, and requires material we have not yet introduced.
Consequently, we will not be able to give the proof here, but will prove it in
Chapter 17.
This result is called the Completeness Theorem because it tells us that
the introduction and elimination rules are complete for the logic of the truth-
functional connectives: anything that is a logical consequence simply in virtue
of the meanings of the truth-functional connectives can be proven in FT . As
illustrated in Figure 8.2, it assures us that all tautologies (and tautologically
valid arguments) are provable in FT .
soundness and Notice, however, that the Soundness Theorem implies a kind of incomplete-
incompleteness ness, since it shows that the rules of FT allow us to prove only tautological
consequences of our premises. They do not allow us to prove any logical
consequence of the premises that is not a tautological consequence of those
premises. For example, it shows that there is no way to prove Dodec(c) from
Dodec(b) b = c in FT , since the former is not a tautological consequence
of the latter. To prove something like this, we will need the identity rules in
addition to the rules for the truth-functional connectives. Similarly, to prove
Chapter 8
Soundness and completeness / 223
Larger(c, b) from Larger(b, c), we would need rules having to do with the
predicate Larger. We will return to these issues in Chapter 19.
The Soundness and Completeness Theorems have practical uses that are uses of soundness and
worth keeping in mind. The Completeness Theorem gives us a method for completeness
showing that an argument has a proof without actually having to find a
such proof: just show that the conclusion is a tautological consequence of
the premises. For example, it is obvious that A (B A) is a tautology so
by the Completeness Theorem we know it must have a proof. Similarly, the
sentence B D is a tautological consequence of ((A B) (C D)) so we
know it must be possible to find a proof of the former from the latter.
The Soundness Theorem, on the other hand, gives us a method for telling
that an argument does not have a proof in FT : show that the conclusion is not
a tautological consequence of the premises. For example, A (A B) is not
a tautology, so it is impossible to construct a proof of it in FT , no matter how
hard you try. Similarly, the sentence B D is a not tautological consequence
of ((A B) (C D)), so we know there is no proof of this in FT .
Recall our earlier discussion of the Taut Con routine in Fitch. This proce-
dure checks to see whether a sentence is a tautological consequence of whatever
sentences you cite in support. You can use the observations in the preceding
paragraphs, along with Taut Con, to decide whether it is possible to give
a proof using the rules of FT . If Taut Con says a particular sentence is a
tautological consequence of the cited sentences, then you know it is possible
to give a full proof of the sentence, even though you may not see exactly how
the proof goes. On the other hand, if Taut Con says it is a not tautological
consequence of the cited sentences, then there is no point in trying to find a
proof in FT , for the simple reason that no such proof is possible.
Remember
Section 8.3
224 / The Logic of Conditionals
Exercises
Decide whether the following two arguments are provable in FT without actually trying to find proofs.
Do this by constructing a truth table in Boole to assess their tautological validity. Submit the table. Then
explain clearly how you know the argument is or is not provable by applying the Soundness and Com-
pleteness results. Turn in your explanations to your instructor. (The explanations are more important
than the tables, so dont forget the second part!)
In the proof of the Soundness Theorem, we only treated three of the twelve rules of FT . The next three
problems ask you to treat some of the other rules.
8.41 Give the argument required for the 8.42 Give the argument required for the
. Elim case of the Soundness proof. Your . Intro case of the Soundness proof. Your
argument will be very similar to the one argument will be similar to the one we
we gave for Elim. gave for Intro.
Section 8.4
Valid arguments: some review exercises
There is wisdom in the old saying Dont lose sight of the forest for the
trees. The forest in our case is an understanding of valid arguments. The
trees are the various methods of proofs, formal and informal, and the notions
of counterexample, tautology, and the like. The problems in this section are
intended to remind you of the relationship between the forest and the trees,
as well as to help you review the main ideas discussed so far.
Since you now know that our introduction and elimination rules suce to
prove any tautologically valid argument, you should feel free to use Taut Con
in doing these exercises. In fact, you may use it in your formal proofs from
now on, but with this important proviso: Make sure that you use it only in
cases where the inference step is obvious and would go by without notice in an
informal proof. For example, you may use it to introduce the law of excluded
Chapter 8
Valid arguments: some review exercises / 225
middle or to apply a DeMorgan equivalence. But you should still use rules like
Elim, Intro, and Intro when your informal proof would use proof by
cases, proof by contradiction, or conditional proof. Any one-step proofs that
consist of a single application of Taut Con will be counted as wrong!
Before doing these problems, go back and read the material in the Re-
member boxes, paying special attention to the strategy for evaluating argu-
ments on page 174.
Remember
From this point on in the book, you may use Taut Con in formal proofs,
but only to skip simple steps that would go unmentioned in an informal
proof.
Exercises
In the following exercises, you are given arguments in the blocks language. Evaluate each arguments
validity. If it is valid, construct a formal proof to show this. If you need to use Ana Con, use it only to
derive from atomic sentences. If the argument is invalid, you should use Tarskis World to construct
a counterexample world.
Section 8.4
226 / The Logic of Conditionals
Chapter 8
Part II
Quantifiers
Chapter 9
Introduction to Quantification
In English and other natural languages, basic sentences are made by combining
noun phrases and verb phrases. The simplest noun phrases are names, like Max
and Claire, which correspond to the constant symbols of fol. More complex
noun phrases are formed by combining common nouns with words known as
determiners, such as every, some, most, the, three, and no, giving us noun determiners
phrases like every cube, some man from Indiana, most children in the class,
the dodecahedron in the corner, three blind mice, and no student of logic.
Logicians call noun phrases of this sort quantified expressions, and sen-
tences containing them quantified sentences. They are so called because they quantified sentences
allow us to talk about quantities of thingsevery cube, most children, and so
forth.
The logical properties of quantified sentences are highly dependent on
which determiner is used. Compare, for example, the following arguments:
229
230 / Introduction to Quantification
actor is a good actor and No rich actor is a good actor really arent made up
of simpler sentences, at least not in any obvious way. Their truth values are
determined by the relationship between the collection of rich actors and the
collection of good actors: by whether all of the former or none of the former
are members of the latter.
Various non-truth-functional constructions that weve already looked at
hidden quantification are, in fact, hidden forms of quantification. Recall, for example, the sentence:
Max is home whenever Claire is at the library.
You saw in Exercise 7.31 that the truth of this sentence at a particular time is
not a truth function of its parts at that time. The reason is that whenever is
an implicit form of quantification, meaning at every time that. The sentence
means something like:
Every time when Claire is at the library is a time when Max is at home.
Another example of a non-truth-functional connective that involves implicit
quantification is logically implies. You cant tell whether P logically implies
Q just by looking at the truth values of P and Q. This is because the claim
means that every logically possible circumstance that makes P true makes Q
true. The claim implicitly quantifies over possible circumstances.
While there are many forms of quantification in English, only two are built
quantifiers of fol explicitly into fol. This language has two quantifier symbols, and , mean-
ing everything and something respectively. This may seem like a very small
number of quantifiers, but surprisingly many other forms of quantification can
be defined from and using predicates and truth-functional connectives, in-
cluding phrases like every cube, three blind mice, no tall student, and whenever.
Some quantified expressions are outside the scope of fol, however, including
most students, many cubes, and infinitely many prime numbers. Well discuss
these issues in Chapter 14.
Section 9.1
Variables and atomic ws
Before we can show you how fols quantifier symbols work, we need to intro-
variables duce a new type of term, called a variable. Variables are a kind of auxiliary
symbol. In some ways they behave like individual constants, since they can
appear in the list of arguments immediately following a predicate or function
symbol. But in other ways they are very dierent from individual constants. In
particular, their semantic function is not to refer to objects. Rather, they are
Chapter 9
Variables and atomic wffs / 231
Remember
Section 9.1
232 / Introduction to Quantification
Section 9.2
The quantifier symbols: ,
Universal quantifier ()
The symbol is used to express universal claims, those we express in English
everything, each thing, using quantified phrases like everything, each thing, all things, and anything.
all things, anything It is always used in connection with a variable, and so is said to be a variable
binding operator. The combination x is read for every object x, or (some-
what misleadingly) for all x.1 If we wanted to translate the (rather unlikely)
English sentence Everything is at home into first-order logic, we would use the
fol sentence
x Home(x)
This says that every object x meets the following condition: x is at home. Or,
to put it more naturally, it says that everything whatsoever is at home.
Of course, we rarely make such unconditional claims about absolutely ev-
erything. More common are restricted universal claims like Every doctor is
smart. This sentence would be translated as
x (Doctor(x) Smart(x))
This fol sentence claims that given any object at allcall it xif x is a
doctor, then x is smart. To put it another way, the sentence says that if you
pick anything at all, youll find either that it is not a doctor or that it is smart
(or perhaps both).
Existential quantifier ()
something, at least one The symbol is used to express existential claims, those we express in English
thing, a, an using such phrases as something, at least one thing, a, and an. It too is always
1 We encourage students to use the first locution when reading formulas, at least for a
few weeks, since we have seen many students who have misunderstood the basic function
of variables as a result of reading them the second way.
Chapter 9
Wffs and sentences / 233
x Home(x)
This says that some object x meets the following condition: x is at home.
While it is possible to make such claims, it is more common to assert
that something of a particular kind meets some condition, say, Some doctor
is smart. This sentence would be translated as
x (Doctor(x) Smart(x))
This sentence claims that some object, call it x, meets the complex condition:
x is both a doctor and smart. Or, more colloquially, it says that there is at
least one smart doctor.
Section 9.3
Ws and sentences
Notice that in some of the above examples, we formed sentences out of complex
expressions that were not themselves sentences, expressions like
Doctor(x) Smart(x)
1. If P is a w, so is P. well-formed
2. If P1 , . . . , Pn are ws, so is (P1 . . . Pn ). formula (w )
3. If P1 , . . . , Pn are ws, so is (P1 . . . Pn ).
4. If P and Q are ws, so is (P Q).
5. If P and Q are ws, so is (P Q).
6. If P is a w and is a variable (i.e., one of t, u, v, w, x, . . . ), then
P is a w
Section 9.3
234 / Introduction to Quantification
Chapter 9
Wffs and sentences / 235
displayed above are sentences, since they all contain free variables. To make
a sentence out of the last of these, we can simply apply rule 6 to produce:
Here all occurrences of the variable x have been bound by the quantifier x.
This w is a sentence since it has no free variables. It claims that for every
object x, if x is both a cube and small, then there is an object y such that x
is to the left of y. Or, to put it more naturally, every small cube is to the left
of something.
These rules can be applied over and over again to form more and more
complex ws. So, for example, repeated application of the first rule to the w
Home(max) will give us all of the following ws:
Home(max)
Home(max)
Home(max)
..
.
Since none of these contains any variables, and so no free variables, they are
all sentences. They claim, as you know, that Max is not home, that it is not
the case that Max is not home, that it is not the case that it is not the case
that Max is not home, and so forth.
We have said that a sentence is a w with no free variables. However, it
can sometimes be a bit tricky deciding whether a variable is free in a w. For
example, there are no free variables in the w,
x (Doctor(x) Smart(x))
x Doctor(x) Smart(x)
Here the last occurrence of the variable x is still free. We can see why this is the
case by thinking about when the existential quantifier was applied in building
up these two formulas. In the first one, the parentheses show that the quantifier
was applied to the conjunction (Doctor(x) Smart(x)). As a consequence, all
occurrences of x in the conjunction were bound by this quantifier. In contrast,
the lack of parentheses show that in building up the second formula, the
existential quantifier was applied to form x Doctor(x), thus binding only the
occurrence of x in Doctor(x). This formula was then conjoined with Smart(x),
and so the latters occurrence of x did not get bound.
Section 9.3
236 / Introduction to Quantification
Parentheses, as you can see from this example, make a big dierence.
scope of quantifier They are the way you can tell what the scope of a quantifier is, that is, which
variables fall under its influence and which dont. This example also shows
that a variable can occur both free and bound in a formula. It is really an
occurrence of a variable that is either free or bound, not the variable itself. In
the formula
x Doctor(x) Smart(x)
the last occurrence of x is free and the second is bound.
Remember
Exercises
9.1 (Fixing some expressions) Open the sentence file Bernsteins Sentences. The expressions in this
list are not quite well-formed sentences of our language, but they can all be made sentences by
slight modification. Turn them into sentences without adding or deleting any quantifier symbols.
With some of them, there is more than one way to make them a sentence. Use Verify to make
sure your results are sentences and then submit the corrected file.
9.2 (Fixing some more expressions) Open the sentence file Schonfinkels Sentences. Again, the ex-
pressions in this list are not well-formed sentences. Turn them into sentences, but this time,
do it only by adding quantifier symbols or variables, or both. Do not add any parentheses. Use
Verify to make sure your results are sentences and submit the corrected file.
9.3 (Making them true) Open Bozos Sentences and Leibnizs World. Some of the expressions in this
file are not ws, some are ws but not sentences, and one is a sentence but false. Read and
assess each one. See if you can adjust each one to make it a true sentence with as little change
as possible. Try to capture the intent of the original expression, if you can tell what that was
(if not, dont worry). Use Verify to make sure your results are true sentences and then submit
your file.
Chapter 9
Semantics for the quantifiers / 237
Section 9.4
Semantics for the quantifiers
When we described the meanings of our various connectives, we told you how
the truth value of a complex sentence, say P, depends on the truth values
of its constituents, in this case P. But we have not yet given you similar rules
for determining the truth value of quantified sentences. The reason is simple:
the expression to which we apply the quantifier in order to build a sentence is
usually not itself a sentence. We could hardly tell you how the truth value of
x Cube(x) depends on the truth value of Cube(x), since this latter expression
is not a sentence at all: it contains a free variable. Because of this, it is neither
true nor false.
To describe when quantified sentences are true, we need to introduce the
auxiliary notion of satisfaction. The basic idea is simple, and can be illustrated satisfaction
with a few examples. We say that an object satisfies the atomic w Cube(x)
if and only if the object is a cube. Similarly, we say an object satisfies the
complex w Cube(x) Small(x) if and only if it is both a cube and small. As
a final example, an object satisfies the w Cube(x) Large(x) if and only if
it is either a cube or not large (or both).
Dierent logic books treat satisfaction in somewhat dierent ways. We
will describe the one that is built into the way that Tarskis World checks
the truth of quantified sentences. Suppose S(x) is a w containing x as its
only free variable, and suppose we wanted to know whether a given object
satisfies S(x). If this object has a name, say b, then form a new sentence S(b)
by replacing all free occurrences of x by the individual constant b. If the new
sentence S(b) is true, then the object satisfies the formula S(x); if the sentence
is not true, then the object does not satisfy the formula.
This works fine as long as the given object has a name. But first-order logic
doesnt require that every object have a name. How can we define satisfaction
for objects that dont have names? It is for this reason that Tarskis World
has, in addition to the individual constants a, b, c, d, e, and f, a further list
n1 , n2 , n3 , . . . of individual constants. If we want to know whether a certain
object without a name satisfies the formula S(x), we choose the first of these
individual constants not in use, say n6 , temporarily name the given object with
this symbol, and then check to see whether the sentence S(n6 ) is true. Thus,
any small cube satisfies Cube(x) Small(x), because if we were to use n6 as a
name of such a small cube, then Cube(n6 ) Small(n6 ) would be a true sentence.
Once we have the notion of satisfaction, we can easily describe when a
sentence of the form x S(x) is true. It will be true if and only if there is at least semantics of
Section 9.4
238 / Introduction to Quantification
Chapter 9
Semantics for the quantifiers / 239
Remember
Section 9.4
240 / Introduction to Quantification
Replace P
P either by P
and switch
commitment.
Replace P Q
PQ either by P Q
and keep
commitment.
Replace P Q by
PQ either (P Q) (Q P)
and keep
commitment.
are committed to there being some object that does not satisfy P(x). Tarskis
World will ask you to live up to your commitment by finding such an object.
We have now seen all the game rules. We summarize them in Table 9.1.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the files Game World and Game Sentences. Go through each sentence
and see if you can tell whether it is true or false. Check your evaluation.
Chapter 9
The four Aristotelian forms / 241
2. Whether you evaluated the sentence correctly or not, play the game twice
for each sentence, first committed to true, then committed to false.
Make sure you understand how the game works at each step.
Exercises
9.4 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. This is an easy but important
. exercise that will familiarize you with the game rules for the quantifiers. There is nothing you
need to turn in or submit.
9.5 (Evaluating sentences in a world) Open Peirces World and Peirces Sentences. There are 30
sentences in this file. Work through them, assessing their truth and playing the game when
necessary. Make sure you understand why they have the truth values they do. (You may need to
switch to the 2-D view for some of the sentences.) After you understand each of the sentences,
go back and make the false ones true by adding or deleting a negation sign. Submit the file
when the sentences all come out true in Peirces World.
9.6 (Evaluating sentences in a world) Open Leibnizs World and Zorns Sentences. The sentences
in this file contain both quantifiers and the identity symbol. Work through them, assessing
their truth and playing the game when necessary. After youre sure you understand why the
sentences get the values they do, modify the false ones to make them true. But this time you
can make any change you want except adding or deleting a negation sign.
9.7 In English we sometimes say things like Every Jason is envied, meaning that everyone named
. Jason is envied. For this reason, students are sometimes tempted to write expressions like
b Cube(b) to mean something like Everything named b is a cube. Explain why this is not well
formed according to the grammatical rules on page 233.
Section 9.5
The four Aristotelian forms
Long before fol was codified, Aristotle studied the kinds of reasoning associ-
ated with quantified noun phrases like Every man, No man, and Some man,
expressions we would translate using our quantifier symbols. The four main
sentence forms treated in Aristotles logic were the following.
Section 9.5
242 / Introduction to Quantification
All Ps are Qs
Aristotelian forms Some Ps are Qs
No Ps are Qs
Some Ps are not Qs
We will begin by looking at the first two of these forms, which we have
already discussed to a certain extent. These forms are translated as follows.
The form All Ps are Qs is translated as:
x (P(x) Q(x))
x (P(x) Q(x))
Beginning students are often tempted to translate the latter more like the
former, namely as:
x (P(x) Q(x))
You try it
................................................................
1. Use Tarskis World to build a world containing a single large cube and
nothing else.
3. Now change the large cube into a small tetrahedron and check to see if
the sentence is true or false. Do you understand why the sentence is still
true? Even if you do, play the game twice, once committed to its being
false, once to its being true.
4. Add a second sentence that correctly expresses the claim that there is a
large cube. Make sure it is false in the current world but becomes true when
you add a large cube. Save your two sentences as Sentences Quantifier 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Chapter 9
The four Aristotelian forms / 243
The other two Aristotelian forms are translated similarly, but using a
negation. In particular No Ps are Qs is translated
x (P(x) Q(x))
Many students, and one of the authors, finds it more natural to use the fol-
lowing, logically equivalent sentence:
x (P(x) Q(x))
x (P(x) Q(x))
Exercises
9.8 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Sentences
Quantifier 1.
9.9 (Building a world) Open Aristotles Sentences. Each of these sentences is of one of the four
Aristotelian forms. Build a single world where all the sentences in the file are true. As you
work through the sentences, you will find yourself successively modifying the world. Whenever
you make a change in the world, you had better go back and check that you havent made
any of the earlier sentences false. Then, when you are finished, verify that all the sentences are
really true and submit your world.
Section 9.5
244 / Introduction to Quantification
9.10 (Common translation mistakes) Open Edgars Sentences and evaluate them in Edgars World.
. Make sure you understand why each of them has the truth value it does. Play the game if
any of the evaluations surprise you. Which of these sentences would be a good translation of
There is a tetrahedron that is large? (Clearly this English sentence is false in Edgars World,
since there are no tetrahedra at all.) Which sentence would be a good translation of There is
a cube between a and b? Which would be a good translation of There is a large dodecahedron?
Express in clear English the claim made by each sentence in the file and turn in your answers
to your instructor.
9.11 (Common mistakes, part 2) Open Allans Sentences. In this file, sentences 1 and 4 are the
|. correct translations of Some dodecahedron is large and All tetrahedra are small, respectively.
Lets investigate the logical relations between these and sentences 2 and 3.
1. Construct a world in which sentences 2 and 4 are true, but sentences 1 and 3 are false.
Save it as World 9.11.1. This shows that sentence 1 is not a consequence of 2, and
sentence 3 is not a consequence of 4.
2. Can you construct a world in which sentence 3 is true and sentence 4 is false? If so, do
so and save it as World 9.11.2. If not, explain why you cant and what this shows.
3. Can you construct a world in which sentence 1 is true and sentence 2 is false? If so, do
so and save it as World 9.11.3. If not, explain why not.
Submit any world files you constructed and turn in any explanations to your instructor.
9.12 (Describing a world) Open Reichenbachs World 1. Start a new sentence file where you will
describe some features of this world using sentences of the simple Aristotelian forms. Check
each of your sentences to see that it is indeed a sentence and that it is true in this world.
1. Use your first sentence to describe the size of all the tetrahedra.
2. Use your second sentence to describe the size of all the cubes.
3. Use your third sentence to express the truism that every dodecahedron is either small,
medium, or large.
4. Notice that some dodecahedron is large. Express this fact.
5. Observe that some dodecahedron is not large. Express this.
6. Notice that some dodecahedron is small. Express this fact.
7. Observe that some dodecahedron is not small. Express this.
8. Notice that some dodecahedron is neither large nor small. Express this.
9. Express the observation that no tetrahedron is large.
10. Express the fact that no cube is large.
Now change the sizes of the objects in the following way: make one of the cubes large, one
of the tetrahedra medium, and all the dodecahedra small. With these changes, the following
should come out false: 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, and 10. If not, then you have made an error in describing
the original world. Can you figure out what it is? Try making other changes and see if your
sentences have the expected truth values. Submit your sentence file.
Chapter 9
Translating complex noun phrases / 245
9.13 Assume we are working in an extension of the first-order language of arithmetic with the
additional predicates Even(x) and Prime(x), meaning, respectively, x is an even number and
x is a prime number. Create a sentence file in which you express the following claims:
1. Every even number is prime.
2. No even number is prime.
3. Some prime is even.
4. Some prime is not even.
5. Every prime is either odd or equal to 2.
[Note that you should assume your domain of discourse consists of the natural numbers, so
there is no need for a predicate Number(x). Also, remember that 2 is not a constant in the
language, so must be expressed using + and 1.]
9.14 (Name that object) Open Maigrets World and Maigrets Sentences. The goal is to try to figure
out which objects have names, and what they are. You should be able to figure this out from
the sentences, all of which are true. Once you have come to your conclusion, assign the six
names to objects in the world in such a way that all the sentences do indeed evaluate as true.
Submit your modified world.
Section 9.6
Translating complex noun phrases
The first thing you have to learn in order to translate quantified English
expressions is how to treat complex noun phrases, expressions like a boy
living in Omaha or every girl living in Duluth. In this section we will
learn how to do this. We concentrate first on the former sort of noun phrase,
whose most natural translation involves an existential quantifier. Typically,
these will be noun phrases starting with one of the determiners some, a, and
an, including noun phrases like something. These are called existential noun existential
phrases, since they assert the existence of something or other. Of course two noun phrases
of our four Aristotelian forms involve existential noun phrases, so we know
the general pattern: existential noun phrases are usually translated using ,
frequently together with .
Lets look at a simple example. Suppose we wanted to translate the sen-
tence A small, happy dog is at home. This sentence claims that there is an
object which is simultaneously a small, happy dog, and at home. We would
translate it as
Section 9.6
246 / Introduction to Quantification
We have put parentheses around the first three predicates to indicate that
they were all part of the translation of the subject noun phrase. But this is
not really necessary.
universal Universal noun phrases are those that begin with determiners like every,
noun phrases each, and all. These are usually translated with the universal quantifier.
Sometimes noun phrases beginning with no and with any are also translated
with the universal quantifier. Two of our four Aristotelian forms involve
universal noun phrases, so we also know the general pattern here: universal
noun phrases are usually translated using , frequently together with .
Lets consider the sentence Every small dog that is at home is happy. This
claims that everything with a complex property, that of being a small dog
at home, has another property, that of being happy. This suggests that the
overall sentence has the form All As are Bs. But in this case, to express the
complex property that fills the A position, we will use a conjunction. Thus
it would be translated as
In this case, the parentheses are not optional. Without them the expression
would not be well formed.
In both of the above examples, the complex noun phrase appeared at
the beginning of the English sentence, much like the quantifier in the fol
noun phrases in translation. Often, however, the English noun phrase will appear somewhere
non-subject positions else in the sentence, say as the direct object, and in these cases the fol
translation may be ordered very dierently from the English sentence. For
example, the sentence Max owns a small, happy dog might be translated:
which says there is a small, happy dog that Max owns. Similarly, the English
sentence Max owns every small, happy dog would end up turned around like
this:
You will be given lots of practice translating complex noun phrases in the
exercises that follow. First, however, we discuss some troublesome cases.
Chapter 9
Translating complex noun phrases / 247
Remember
y(Tet(y) Small(y))
which asserts that every tetrahedron is small. But imagine that it has been
asserted about a world in which there are no tetrahedra. In such a world the
sentence is true simply because there are no tetrahedra at all, small, medium,
or large. Consequently, it is impossible to find a counterexample, a tetrahedron
which is not small.
What strikes students as especially odd are examples like
y(Tet(y) Cube(y))
On the face of it, such a sentence looks contradictory. But we see that if it is
asserted about a world in which there are no tetrahedra, then it is in fact true.
But that is the only way it can be true: if there are no tetrahedra. In other
words, the only way this sentence can be true is if it is vacuously true. Lets
call generalizations with this property inherently vacuous. Thus, a sentence of inherently vacuous
the form x (P(x) Q(x)) is inherently vacuous if the only worlds in which it generalizations
is true are those in which x P(x) is true.
Section 9.6
248 / Introduction to Quantification
You try it
................................................................
1. Open Dodgsons Sentences. Note that the first sentence says that every
tetrahedron is large.
2. Open Peanos World. Sentence 1 is clearly false in this world, since the
small tetrahedron is a counterexample to the universal claim. What this
means is that if you play the game committed to the falsity of this claim,
then when Tarskis World asks you to pick an object you will be able to
pick the small tetrahedron and win the game. Try this.
4. Now open Peirces World. Verify that sentence 1 is again false, this time
because there are three counterexamples. (Now if you play the game com-
mitted to the falsity of the sentence, you will have three dierent winning
moves when asked to pick an object: you can pick any of the small tetra-
hedra and win.)
5. Delete all three counterexamples, and evaluate the claim. Is the result
what you expected? The generalization is true, because there are no coun-
terexamples to it. It is what we called a vacuously true generalization,
since there are no objects that satisfy the antecedent. That is, there are
no tetrahedra at all, small, medium, or large. Confirm that all of sentences
13 are vacuously true in the current world.
6. Two more vacuously true sentences are given in sentences 4 and 5. How-
ever, these sentences are dierent in another respect. Each of the first three
sentences could have been non-vacuously true in a world, but these latter
two can only be true in worlds containing no tetrahedra. That is, they are
inherently vacuous.
Chapter 9
Translating complex noun phrases / 249
no freshman took her class. Here we wouldnt say that she lied, but we would
certainly say that she misled us. Her statement typically carries the conver-
sational implicature that there were freshmen in the class. If there were no conversational
freshmen, then thats what she would have said if she were being forthright. implicature
Inherently vacuous claims are true only when they are misleading, so they
strike us as intuitively false.
Another source of confusion concerns the relationship between the follow-
ing two Aristotelian sentences:
Some Ps are Qs
All Ps are Qs
Students often have the intuition that the first should contradict the second.
After all, why would you say that some student got an A if every student got
an A? If this intuition were right, then the correct translation of Some Ps
are Qs would not be what we have suggested above, but rather
Remember
Exercises
9.15 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Sentences
Vacuous 1.
Section 9.6
250 / Introduction to Quantification
9.16 (Translating existential noun phrases) Start a new sentence file and enter translations of the
following English sentences. Each will use the symbol exactly once. None will use the symbol
. As you go, check that your entries are well-formed sentences. By the way, you will find that
many of these English sentences are translated using the same first-order sentence.
1. Something is large.
2. Something is a cube.
3. Something is a large cube.
4. Some cube is large.
5. Some large cube is to the left of b.
6. A large cube is to the left of b.
7. b has a large cube to its left.
8. b is to the right of a large cube. [Hint: This translation should be almost the same as
the last, but it should contain the predicate symbol RightOf.]
9. Something to the left of b is in back of c.
10. A large cube to the left of b is in back of c.
11. Some large cube is to the left of b and in back of c.
12. Some dodecahedron is not large.
13. Something is not a large dodecahedron.
14. Its not the case that something is a large dodecahedron.
15. b is not to the left of a cube. [Warning: This sentence is ambiguous. Can you think of
two importantly dierent translations? One starts with , the other starts with . Use
the second of these for your translation, since this is the most natural reading of the
English sentence.]
Now lets check the translations against a world. Open Montagues World.
Notice that all the English sentences above are true in this world. Check that all your
translations are also true. If not, you have made a mistake. Can you figure out what is
wrong with your translation?
Move the large cube to the back right corner of the grid. Observe that English sentences
5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, and 15 are now false, while the rest remain true. Check that the same
holds of your translations. If not, you have made a mistake. Figure out what is wrong
with your translation and fix it.
Now make the large cube small. The English sentences 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, and
15 are false in the modified world, the rest are true. Again, check that your translations
have the same truth values. If not, figure out what is wrong.
Finally, move c straight back to the back row, and make the dodecahedron large. All the
English sentences other than 1, 2, and 13 are false. Check that the same holds for your
translations. If not, figure out where you have gone wrong and fix them.
When you are satisfied that your translations are correct, submit your sentence file.
Chapter 9
Translating complex noun phrases / 251
9.17 (Translating universal noun phrases) Start a new sentence file, and enter translations of the
following sentences. This time each translation will contain exactly one and no .
1. All cubes are small.
2. Each small cube is to the right of a.
3. a is to the left of every dodecahedron.
4. Every medium tetrahedron is in front of b.
5. Each cube is either in front of b or in back of a.
6. Every cube is to the right of a and to the left of b.
7. Everything between a and b is a cube.
8. Everything smaller than a is a cube.
9. All dodecahedra are not small. [Note: Most people find this sentence ambiguous. Can
you find both readings? One starts with , the other with . Use the former, the one
that means all the dodecahedra are either medium or large.]
10. No dodecahedron is small.
11. a does not adjoin everything. [Note: This sentence is ambiguous. We want you to
interpret it as a denial of the claim that a adjoins everything.]
12. a does not adjoin anything. [Note: These last two sentences mean dierent things,
though they can both be translated using , , and Adjoins.]
13. a is not to the right of any cube.
14. () If something is a cube, then it is not in the same column as either a or b. [Warning:
While this sentence contains the noun phrase something, it is actually making a
universal claim, and so should be translated with . You might first try to paraphrase
it using the English phrase every cube.]
15. () Something is a cube if and only if it is not in the same column as either a or b.
Open Claires World. Check to see that all the English sentences are true in this world,
then make sure the same holds of your translations. If you have made any mistakes, fix
them.
Adjust Claires World by moving a directly in front of c. With this change, the English
sentences 2, 6, and 1215 are false, while the rest are true. Make sure that the same holds
of your translations. If not, try to figure out what is wrong and fix it.
Next, open Wittgensteins World. Observe that the English sentences 2, 3, 7, 8, 11, 12,
and 13 are true, but the rest are false. Check that the same holds for your translations.
If not, try to fix them.
Finally, open Venns World. English sentences 2, 4, 7, and 1114 are true; does the same
hold for your translations?
When you are satisfied that your translations are correct, submit your sentence file.
Section 9.6
252 / Introduction to Quantification
9.18 (Translation) Open Leibnizs World. This time, we will translate some sentences while looking
at the world they are meant to describe.
Start a new sentence file, and enter translations of the following sentences. Each of the
English sentences is true in this world. As you go, check to make sure that your translation
is indeed a true sentence.
Now lets change the world so that none of the English sentences is true. We can do this
as follows. First change b into a medium cube. Next, delete the leftmost tetrahedron and
move b to exactly the position just vacated by the late tetrahedron. Finally, add a small
cube to the world, locating it exactly where b used to sit. If your answers to 15 are
correct, all of the translations should now be false. Verify that they are.
Make various changes to the world, so that some of the English sentences come out true
and some come out false. Then check to see that the truth values of your translations
track the truth values of the English sentences.
9.19 Start a new sentence file and translate the following into fol using the symbols from Table 1.2,
page 30. Note that all of your translations will involve quantifiers, though this may not be
obvious from the English sentences. (Some of your translations will also require the identity
predicate.)
1. People are not pets.
2. Pets are not people.
3. Scruy was not fed at either 2:00 or 2:05. [Remember, Fed is a ternary predicate.]
4. Claire fed Folly at some time between 2:00 and 3:00.
5. Claire gave a pet to Max at 2:00.
6. Claire had only hungry pets at 2:00.
7. Of all the students, only Claire was angry at 3:00.
8. No one fed Folly at 2:00.
9. If someone fed Pris at 2:00, they were angry.
10. Whoever owned Pris at 2:00 was angry five minutes later.
9.20 Using Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following into colloquial English.
. 1. t Gave(claire, folly, max, t)
2. x (Pet(x) Hungry(x, 2:00))
Chapter 9
Quantifiers and function symbols / 253
9.21 Translate the following into fol, introducing names, predicates, and function symbols as
. needed. As usual, explain your predicates and function symbols, and any shortcomings in
your translations. If you assume a particular domain of discourse, mention that as well.
1. Only the brave know how to forgive.
2. No man is an island.
3. I care for nobody, not I,
If no one cares for me.
4. Every nation has the government it deserves.
5. There are no certainties, save logic.
6. Misery (that is, a miserable person) loves company.
7. All that glitters is not gold.
8. There was a jolly miller once
Lived on the River Dee.
9. If you praise everybody, you praise nobody.
10. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.
Section 9.7
Quantifiers and function symbols
x Nicer(father(father(x)), father(x))
This sentence says that everyones paternal grandfather is nicer than their
father, a false belief held by many children.
Notice that even if our language had individual constants naming every-
ones father (and their fathers fathers and so on), we could not express the
above claim in a single sentence without using the function symbol father.
True, if we added the binary predicate FatherOf, we could get the same point
across, but the sentence would be considerably more complex. It would require
Section 9.7
254 / Introduction to Quantification
Even(n2 ) Even(n)
y (Even(y y) Even(y))
The blocks language does not have function symbols, though we could
have introduced some. Remember the four function symbols, fm, bm, lm and
rm, that we discussed in Chapter 1 (page 33). The idea was that these meant
frontmost, backmost, leftmost, and rightmost, respectively, where, for instance,
the complex term lm(b) referred to the leftmost block in the same row as b.
Thus a formula like
lm(x) = x
is satisfied by a block b if and only if b is the leftmost block in its row. If we
append a universal quantifier to this atomic w, we get the sentence
x (lm(x) = x)
which is true in exactly those worlds that have at most one block in each
row. This claim could be expressed in the blocks language without function
symbols, but again it would require a sentence with more than one quantifier.
To check if you understand these function symbols, see if you can tell
which of the following two sentences is true in all worlds and which makes a
substantive claim, true in some worlds and false in others:
x (lm(lm(x)) = lm(x))
x (fm(lm(x)) = lm(x))
In reading a term like fm(lm(b)), remember that you apply the inner func-
tion first, then the outer. That is, you first find the leftmost block in the
row containing bcall it cand then find the frontmost block in the column
containing c.
Chapter 9
Quantifiers and function symbols / 255
Exercises
9.22 Assume that we have expanded the blocks language to include the function symbols fm, bm, lm
. and rm described earlier. Then the following formulas would all be sentences of the language:
1. y (fm(y) = e)
2. x (lm(x) = b x = b)
3. x Small(fm(x))
4. x (Small(x) fm(x) = x)
5. x (Cube(x) Dodec(lm(x)))
6. x (rm(lm(x)) = x)
7. x (fm(bm(x)) = x)
8. x (fm(x) = x Tet(fm(x)))
9. x (lm(x) = b SameRow(x, b))
10. y (lm(fm(y)) = fm(lm(y)) Small(y))
Fill in the following table with trues and falses according to whether the indicated sentence
is true or false in the indicated world. Since Tarskis World does not understand the function
symbols, you will not be able to check your answers. We have filled in a few of the entries for
you. Turn in the completed table to your instructor.
Section 9.7
256 / Introduction to Quantification
Jon Mary
(6' 5") (5' 6")
9.23 Consider the first-order language with function symbols mother and father, plus names for each
. of the people shown in the family tree in Figure 9.1. Here are some atomic ws, each with a
single free variable x. For each, pick a person for x that satisfies the w, if you can. If there is
no such person indicated in the family tree, say so.
1. mother(x) = ellen
2. father(x) = jon
3. mother(father(x)) = mary
4. father(mother(x)) = john
5. mother(father(x)) = addie
6. father(mother(father(x))) = john
7. father(father(mother(x))) = archie
8. father(father(jim)) = x
9. father(father(mother(claire))) = x
10. mother(mother(mary)) = mother(x)
9.24 Again using Figure 9.1, figure out which of the sentences listed below are true. Assume that
. the domain of discourse consists of the people listed in the family tree.
1. x Taller(x, mother(x))
2. x Taller(father(x), mother(x))
3. y Taller(mother(mother(y)), mother(father(y)))
4. z [z = father(claire) Taller(father(claire), z)]
5. x [Taller(x, father(x)) Taller(x, claire)]
Chapter 9
Alternative notation / 257
9.25 Assume you are working in an extension of the first-order language of arithmetic with the
additional predicates Even(x) and Prime(x). Express the following in this language, explicitly
using the function symbol , as in z z, rather than z2 . Note that you do not have a predicate
Square(x).
1. No square is prime.
2. Some square is odd.
3. The square of any prime is prime.
4. The square of any prime other than 2 is odd.
5. The square of any number greater than 1 is greater than the number itself.
Section 9.8
Alternative notation
The notation we have been using for the quantifiers is currently the most
popular. An older notation that is still in some use employs (x) for x. Thus,
for example, in this notation our
x [Tet(x) Small(x)]
would be written:
(x) [Tet(x) Small(x)]
Another notation that is occasionally used exploits the similarity between
universal quantification and conjunction by writing x instead of x. In this
notation our sentence would be rendered:
x [Tet(x) Small(x)]
Section 9.8
258 / Introduction to Quantification
Remember
Exercises
9.26 (Overcoming dialect dierences) The following are all sentences of fol. But theyre in dierent
dialects. Start a new sentence file in Tarskis World and translate them into our dialect.
1. (x)(P(x) Q(x))
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
We have now introduced all of the symbols of first-order logic, though were
nowhere near finished learning all there is to know about them. Before we
go on, we should explain where the first-order in first-order logic comes first-order logic
from. It has to do with the kinds of things that our quantifiers quantify over.
In fol we are allowed to say things like x Large(x), that is, there is something
that has the property of being large. But we cant say things like there is some
property that Max has: P P(max).
First-order quantifiers allow us to make quantity claims about ordinary
objects: blocks, people, numbers, sets, and so forth. (Note that we are very
liberal about what an ordinary object is.) If, in addition, we want to make
quantity claims about properties of the objects in our domain of discourse
say we want to claim that Max and Claire share exactly two propertiesthen
we need what is known as second-order quantifiers. Since our language only second-order
has first-order quantifiers, it is known as the language of first-order logic: fol. quantifiers
Now that weve learned the basics of how to express ourselves using first-
order quantifiers, we can turn our attention to the central issues of logical
consequence and logical truth:
In this chapter we take up the first two questions; the remaining two are
treated in Chapters 12 and 13.
Section 10.1
Tautologies and quantification
259
260 / The Logic of Quantifiers
2. x Cube(x)
x Small(x)
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
The first of these is valid because if every cube is small, and everything is
a cube, then everything is small. The second is valid because if everything
is a cube, and everything is small, then everything is a small cube. But are
these arguments tautologically valid? Or, to put it another way, can we simply
ignore the quantifiers appearing in these arguments and apply the principles
of modus ponens and Intro?
It doesnt take long to see that ignoring quantifiers doesnt work. For ex-
ample, neither of the following arguments is valid, tautologically or otherwise:
3. x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x Cube(x)
x Small(x)
4. x Cube(x)
x Small(x)
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
Chapter 10
Tautologies and quantification / 261
x Cube(x) x Cube(x)
x Cube(x) x Cube(x)
This sentence, unlike the previous one, is an instance of the law of excluded
middle. It says that either everything is a cube or its not the case that ev-
erything is a cube, and thats going to be true so long as the constituent
sentence x Cube(x) has a definite truth value. It would hold equally well if
the constituent sentence were x Cube(x), a fact you could recognize even if
you didnt know exactly what this sentence meant.
Recall that if we have a tautology and replace its atomic sentences by
complex sentences, the result is still a tautology, and hence also a logical
truth. This holds as long as the things we are substituting are sentences that
have definite truth values (whether true or not). We can use this observation
to discover a large number of quantified sentences that are logical truths.
Consider the following tautology:
(A B) (B A)
Section 10.1
262 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Chapter 10
Tautologies and quantification / 263
Section 10.1
264 / The Logic of Quantifiers
6. (A B) (A C)
x (Cube(x) Small(x))A
x Cube(x)B
x Small(x)C
Chapter 10
Tautologies and quantification / 265
A
B
C
This shows that argument 3 is not an instance of Elim. But when we apply
the algorithm to a deceptively similar argument:
x Cube(x)A x Small(x)B
x Cube(x)A
x Small(x)B
AB
A
B
The Taut Con procedure of Fitch uses the truth-functional form algo-
rithm so you can use it to check whether a quantified sentence is a tautology,
or whether it is a tautological consequence of other sentences.
The truth-functional form algorithm allows us to apply all of the concepts
of propositional logic to sentences and arguments containing quantifiers. But
we have also encountered several examples of logical truths that are not tau-
tologies, and logically valid arguments that are not tautologically valid. In the
next section we look at these.
Remember
Section 10.1
266 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Exercises
10.1 For each of the following, use the truth-functional form algorithm to annotate the sentence and
. determine its form. Then classify the sentence as (a) a tautology, (b) a logical truth but not
a tautology, or (c) not a logical truth. (If your answer is (a), feel free to use the Taut Con
routine in Fitch to check your answer.)
1. x x = x
2. x Cube(x) Cube(a)
3. Cube(a) x Cube(x)
4. x (Cube(x) Small(x)) x (Small(x) Cube(x))
5. v (Cube(v) Small(v)) v (Cube(v) Small(v))
6. x Cube(x) x Cube(x)
7. [z (Cube(z) Large(z)) Cube(b)] Large(b)
8. x Cube(x) (x Cube(x) y Dodec(y))
9. (x Cube(x) y Dodec(y)) x Cube(x)
10. [(u Cube(u) u Small(u)) u Small(u)] u Cube(u)
In the following six exercises, use the truth-functional form algorithm to annotate the argument. Then
write out its truth-functional form. Finally, assess whether the argument is (a) tautologically valid, (b)
logically but not tautologically valid, or (c) invalid. Feel free to check your answers with Taut Con.
(Exercises 10.6 and 10.7 are, by the way, particularly relevant to the proof of the Completeness Theorem
for F given in Chapter 19.)
Chapter 10
First-order validity and consequence / 267
[In 10.6 and 10.7, we could think of the first premise as a way of introducing a new constant, c, by
means of the assertion: Let the constant c name a large cube, if there are any; otherwise, it may name
any object. Sentences of this sort are called Henkin witnessing axioms, and are put to important use
in proving completeness for F. The arguments show that if a constant introduced in this way ends up
naming a tetrahedron, it can only be because there arent any large cubes.]
Section 10.2
First-order validity and consequence
When we first discussed the intuitive notions of logical truth and logical con-
sequence, we appealed to the idea of a logically possible circumstance. We
described a logically valid argument, for example, as one whose conclusion is
true in every possible circumstance in which all the premises are true. When
we needed more precision than this description allowed, we introduced truth
tables and the concepts of tautology and tautological consequence. These
Section 10.2
268 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Chapter 10
First-order validity and consequence / 269
x SameSize(x, x)
x Cube(x) Cube(b)
(Cube(b) b = c) Cube(c)
(Small(b) SameSize(b, c)) Small(c)
All of these are arguably logical truths of the blocks language, but only
the middle two are first-order validities. One way to see this is to replace
the familiar blocks language predicates with nonsensical predicates, like those using nonsense
used in Lewis Carrolls famous poem Jabberwocky.1 The results would look predicates to test for
1 The full text of Jabberwocky can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
FO validity
Jabberwocky. The first stanza is:
Lewis Carroll was the pen name of the logician Charles Dodgson (after whom both
Carrolls World and Dodgsons Sentences were named).
Section 10.2
270 / The Logic of Quantifiers
x (Tet(x) Large(x))
Large(b)
Tet(b)
x (Borogove(x) Mimsy(x))
Mimsy(b)
Borogove(b)
Again, its easy to see that if the borogoves (whatever they may be) are
all mimsy (whatever that may mean), and if b is not mimsy, then it cant
possibly be a borogove. So the conclusion is not just a logical consequence of
the premises, it is a first-order consequence.
Recall that to show that a sentence was not a tautological consequence
of some premises, it suced to find a truth-value assignment to the atomic
sentences that made the premises true and the conclusion false. A similar pro-
cedure can be used to show that a conclusion is not a first-order consequence
of its premises, except instead of truth-value assignments what we look for is
a bit more complicated. Suppose we are given the following argument:
Chapter 10
First-order validity and consequence / 271
x Larger(x, a)
x Larger(b, x)
Larger(c, d)
Larger(a, b)
The first premise tells you that nothing is larger than a and the second tells you
that b is not larger than anything. If you were trying to build a counterexample
world, you might reason that a must be the largest object in the world (or
one of them) and that b must be the smallest (or one of them). Since the third
premise guarantees that the objects in the world arent all the same size, the
conclusion cant be falsified in a world in which the premises are true.
Is this conclusion a first-order consequence of the premises? To show that first-order
its not, well do two things. First, lets replace the predicate Larger with a counterexamples
meaningless predicate, to help clear our minds of any constraints suggested
by the predicate:
x R(x, a)
x R(b, x)
R(c, d)
R(a, b)
Section 10.2
272 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Chapter 10
First-order validity and consequence / 273
LeftOf(x, x)
x
be(x) Cube
Cu (a
x )
(a) Tet(
et
Tautologies
T
a)
First-order validities
Logical truths
Figure 10.2: The relation between tautologies, first-order validities, and logical
truths
Lets try our hand at applying all of these concepts, using the various
consequence mechanisms in Fitch.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file FO Con 1. Here you are given a collection of premises, plus a
series of sentences that follow logically from them. Your task is to cite sup-
port sentences and specify one of the consequence rules to justify each step.
But the trick is that you must use the weakest consequence mechanism
possible and cite the minimal number of support sentences possible.
2. Focus on the first step after the Fitch bar, x Cube(x) Cube(b). You will
recognize this as a logical truth, which means that you should not have
Section 10.2
274 / The Logic of Quantifiers
to cite any premises in support of this step. First, ask yourself whether
the sentence is a tautology. No, it is not, so Taut Con will not check out.
Is it a first-order validity? Yes, so change the rule to FO Con and see
if it checks out. It would also check out using Ana Con, but this rule is
stronger than necessary, so your answer would be counted wrong if you
used this mechanism.
3. Continue through the remaining sentences, citing only necessary support-
ing premises and the weakest Con mechanism possible.
4. Save your proof as Proof FO Con 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Just as for Taut Con, FO Con has its own special goggles which allow you
to obscure the information not considered when checking the inference rule.
In this case less is obscured by the goggles, since more information is taken
into account. Consider inferring Tove(b) from x (Tove(x) Slithy(x)) and
Slithy(b).
With FO Cons goggles, this inference looks like this:
x ( Tove (x) Slithy (x))
Slithy (b)
Here the predicate symbol Slithy has been replaced by Slithy , and the
predicate symbol Tove by Tove .
FO Con goggles work exactly the same way as Taut Con goggles do.
When focussed on a step which uses FO Con, the goggles are switched on by
clicking on their icon, and switched o by clicking again.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Goggles Example, which contains the inference described
above. Use the FO Con goggles to verify that the eect is as we have
described.
2. The particular goggles used by Fitch depend on the inference rule. To use
Taut Con goggles on this inference, first take the FO Con goggles o
(you cant wear both kinds at the same time), and then change the rule
to Taut Con. Then switch on the Taut Con goggles.
Chapter 10
First-order validity and consequence / 275
3. Notice that you see something dierent now. The display should look like
this:
x (Tove(x) Slithy(x))
Slithy(b)
Because the Taut Con inference rule does not take into account the mean-
ing of quantifiers, the entire quantified formula in the initial step is treated
as a single atomic formula. Since the inference contains three completely
unrelated formulas, as far as Taut Con is concerned, this inference will
not check out.
4. Take o the Taut Con goggles, and check the inference. As predicted, it
will not check out, since the conclusion is not a tautological consequence
of the premises. There is nothing to save.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Remember
Section 10.2
276 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Exercises
10.8 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof FO Con 1.
Turn in your answers to parts 1, 3, and 4; submit the worlds you build in part 2.
Each of the following arguments is valid. Some of the conclusions are (a) tautological consequences of
the premises, some are (b) first-order consequences that are not tautological consequences, and some are
(c) logical consequences that are not first-order consequences. Use the truth-functional form algorithm
and the replacement method to classify each argument. You should justify your classifications by turning
in (a) the truth-functional form of the argument, (b) the truth-functional form and the argument with
nonsense predicates substituted, or (c) the truth-functional form, the nonsense argument, and a first-
order counterexample.
Chapter 10
First-order equivalence and DeMorgans laws / 277
Section 10.3
First-order equivalence and DeMorgans laws
There are two ways in which we can apply what we learned about tautolog-
ical equivalence to first-order sentences. First of all, if you apply the truth-
functional form algorithm to a pair of sentences and the resulting forms are
tautologically equivalent, then of course the original sentences are first-order
equivalent. For example, the sentence:
(x Cube(x) y Dodec(y))
x Cube(x) y Dodec(y)
When you apply the truth-functional form algorithm, you see that this is just
an instance of one of DeMorgans laws.
But it turns out that we can also apply DeMorgan, and similar principles,
inside the scope of quantifiers. Lets look at an example involving the Law of
Contraposition. Consider the sentences:
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x (Small(x) Cube(x))
Section 10.3
278 / The Logic of Quantifiers
A moments thought will convince you that each of these sentences is a first-
order consequence of the other, and so they are first-order equivalent. But
unlike the previous examples, they are not tautologically equivalent.
To see why Contraposition (and other principles of equivalence) can be
applied in the scope of quantifiers, we need to consider the ws to which the
principle was applied:
Cube(x) Small(x)
Small(x) Cube(x)
P(x) Q(x)
Q(x) P(x)
where P(x) and Q(x) may be any formulas, atomic or complex, containing the
single free variable x.
Now since these formulas are not sentences, it makes no sense to say they
are true in exactly the same circumstances, or that they are logical (or tauto-
logical) consequences of one another. Formulas with free variables are neither
true nor false. But there is an obvious extension of the notion of logical equiv-
alence that applies to formulas with free variables. It is easy to see that in
any possible circumstance, the above two formulas will be satisfied by exactly
the same objects. Heres a proof of this fact:
P(n1 ) Q(n1 )
Q(n1 ) P(n1 )
Since x was the only free variable, these are sentences. But by our
assumption, one of them is true and one is false, since that is how
we defined satisfaction. But this is a contradiction, since these two
sentences are logically equivalent by Contraposition.
logically equivalent ws We will say that two ws with free variables are logically equivalent if, in
any possible circumstance, they are satisfied by the same objects.2 Or, what
2 Though we havent discussed satisfaction for ws with more than one free variable, a
similar argument can be applied to such ws: the only dierence is that more than one
name is substituted in for the free variables.
Chapter 10
First-order equivalence and DeMorgans laws / 279
comes to the same thing, two ws are logically equivalent if, when you re-
place their free variables with new names, the resulting sentences are logically
equivalent.
The above proof, suitably generalized, shows that when we apply any of our
principles of logical equivalence to a formula, the result is a logically equivalent
formula, one that is satisfied by exactly the same objects as the original. This
in turn is why the sentence x (Cube(x) Small(x)) is logically equivalent
to the sentence x (Small(x) Cube(x)). If every object in the domain of
discourse (or one object, or thirteen objects) satisfies the first formula, then
every object (or one or thirteen) must satisfy the second.
Equipped with the notion of logically equivalent ws, we can restate the
principle of substitution of equivalents so that it applies to full first-order substitution of
logic. Let P and Q be ws, possibly containing free variables, and let S(P) be equivalent ws
any sentence containing P as a component part. Then if P and Q are logically
equivalent:
PQ
then so too are S(P) and S(Q):
S(P) S(Q)
Section 10.3
280 / The Logic of Quantifiers
ings of our quantifiers, you will see that there is a strong analogy between
and , on the one hand, and between and , on the other. For example,
suppose we are talking about a world consisting of four named blocks, say
a, b, c, and d. Then the sentence x Cube(x) will be true if and only if the
following conjunction is true:
Cube(a) Cube(b) Cube(c) Cube(d)
Likewise, x Cube(x) will be true if and only if this disjunction is true:
Cube(a) Cube(b) Cube(c) Cube(d)
This analogy suggests that the quantifiers may interact with negation in a
way similar to conjunction and disjunction. Indeed, in our four-block world,
the sentence
x Small(x)
will be true if and only if the following negation is true:
(Small(a) Small(b) Small(c) Small(d))
which, by DeMorgan, will hold just in case the following disjunction is true:
Small(a) Small(b) Small(c) Small(d)
which in turn will be true if and only if the following holds:
x Small(x)
DeMorgan laws for The DeMorgan laws for the quantifiers allow you to push a negation sign
quantifiers past a quantifier by switching the quantifier from to or from to . So, for
example, if we know that not everything has some property (x P(x)), then
we know that something does not have the property (x P(x)), and vice versa.
Similarly, if we know that it is not the case that something has some property
(x P(x)), then we know that everything must fail to have it (x P(x)), and
vice versa. We call these the DeMorgan laws for quantifiers, due to the analogy
described above; they are also known as the quantifier/negation equivalences:
x P(x) x P(x)
x P(x) x P(x)
By applying these laws along with some earlier equivalences, we can see
that there is a close relationship between certain pairs of Aristotelian sen-
tences. In particular, the negation of All Ps are Qs is logically equivalent to
Some Ps are not Qs. To demonstrate this equivalence, we note the following
chain of equivalences. The first is the translation of It is not true that all Ps
are Qs while the last is the translation of Some Ps are not Qs.
Chapter 10
First-order equivalence and DeMorgans laws / 281
The first step uses the equivalence of P(x) Q(x) and P(x) Q(x). The sec-
ond and third steps use DeMorgans laws, first one of the quantifier versions,
and then one of the Boolean versions. The last step uses the double negation
law applied to P(x).
A similar chain of equivalences shows that the negation of Some Ps are
Qs is equivalent to No Ps are Qs:
Remember
1. x P(x) x P(x)
2. x P(x) x P(x)
Exercises
10.20 Give a chain of equivalences showing that the negation of Some Ps are Qs (x (P(x) Q(x)))
. is equivalent to No Ps are Qs (x (P(x) Q(x))).
10.21 Open DeMorgans Sentences 2. This file contains six sentences, but each of sentences 4, 5, and
. 6 is logically equivalent to one of the first three. Without looking at what the sentences say, see
if you can figure out which is equivalent to which by opening various world files and evaluating
the sentences. (You should be able to figure this out from Ackermanns, Bolzanos, and Claires
Worlds, plus what weve told you.) Once you think youve figured out which are equivalent to
which, write out three equivalence chains to prove youre right. Turn these in to your instructor.
Section 10.3
282 / The Logic of Quantifiers
10.22 ( versus ) We pointed out the similarity between and , as well as that between and
. But we were careful not to claim that the universally quantified sentence was logically
equivalent to the analogous conjunction. This problem will show you why we did not make this
claim.
Open Churchs Sentences and Ramseys World. Evaluate the sentences in this world. You
will notice that the first two sentences have the same truth value, as do the second two.
Modify Ramseys World in any way you like, but do not add or delete objects, and do not
change the names used. Verify that the first two sentences always have the same truth
values, as do the last two.
Now add one object to the world. Adjust the objects so that the first sentence is false, the
second and third true, and the last false. Submit your work as World 10.22. This world
shows that the first two sentences are not logically equivalent. Neither are the last two.
Section 10.4
Other quantifier equivalences
The quantifier DeMorgan laws tell us how quantifiers interact with negation.
Equally important is the question of how quantifiers interact with conjunction
and disjunction. The laws governing this interaction, though less interesting
than DeMorgans, are harder to remember, so you need to pay attention!
First of all, notice that x (P(x) Q(x)), which says that everything is
quantifiers and Boolean both P and Q, is logically equivalent to x P(x) x Q(x), which says that
connectives everything is P and everything is Q. These are just two dierent ways of saying
that every object in the domain of discourse has both properties P and Q. By
contrast, x (P(x) Q(x)) is not logically equivalent to x P(x) x Q(x). For
example, the sentence x (Cube(x) Tet(x)) says that everything is either a
cube or a tetrahedron, but the sentence x Cube(x) x Tet(x) says that either
everything is a cube or everything is a tetrahedron, clearly a very dierent
kettle of fish. We summarize these two observations, positive and negative, as
follows:
Chapter 10
Other quantifier equivalences / 283
Section 10.4
284 / The Logic of Quantifiers
(in which case, they will all satisfy the disjunctive w by satisfying the second
disjunct), or both. That is, this sentence imposes the same conditions on a
world as the sentence Cube(b) x Small(x). Indeed, when the variable x is
not free in a w P, we have both of the following:
x (P Q(x)) P x Q(x)
x (P Q(x)) P x Q(x)
We codify this by means of the following: For any w P(x) and variable y that
does not occur in P(x)
x P(x) y P(y)
x P(x) y P(y)
Chapter 10
Other quantifier equivalences / 285
Remember
(a) x P P
(b) x P P
(c) x (P Q(x)) P x Q(x)
(d) x (P Q(x)) P x Q(x)
3. (Replacing bound variables) For any w P(x) and variable y that does
not occur in P(x):
Exercises
10.23 (Null quantification) Open Null Quantification Sentences. In this file you will find sentences in
the odd numbered slots. Notice that each sentence is obtained by putting a quantifier in front
of a sentence in which the quantified variable is not free.
1. Open Godels World and evaluate the truth of the first sentence. Do you understand why
it is false? Repeatedly play the game committed to the truth of this sentence, each time
choosing a dierent block when your turn comes around. Not only do you always lose,
but your choice has no impact on the remainder of the game. Frustrating, eh?
2. Check the truth of the remaining sentences and make sure you understand why they have
the truth values they do. Play the game a few times on the second sentence, committed
to both true and false. Notice that neither your choice of a block (when committed to
false) nor Tarskis Worlds choice (when committed to true) has any eect on the game.
Section 10.4
286 / The Logic of Quantifiers
3. In the even numbered slots, write the sentence from which the one above it was obtained.
Check that the even and odd numbered sentences have the same truth value, no matter
how you modify the world. This is because they are logically equivalent. Save and submit
your sentence file.
Some of the following biconditionals are logical truths (which is the same as saying that the two sides of
the biconditional are logically equivalent); some are not. If you think the biconditional is a logical truth,
create a file with Fitch, enter the sentence, and check it using FO Con. If the sentence is not a logical
truth, create a world in Tarskis World in which it is false. Submit the file you create.
10.24 (x Cube(x) x Dodec(x)) 10.25 z Small(z) z Small(z)
x (Cube(x) Dodec(x))
Section 10.5
The axiomatic method
As we will see in the coming chapters, first-order consequence comes much
closer to capturing the logical consequence relation of ordinary language than
does tautological consequence. This will be apparent from the kinds of sen-
tences that we can translate into the quantified language and from the kinds
of inference that turn out to be first-order valid.
Still, we have already encountered several arguments that are intuitively
valid but not first-order valid. Lets look at an example where the replacement
method reveals that the conclusion is not a first-order consequence of the
premises:
Chapter 10
The axiomatic method / 287
which is logically valid no matter what the predicates P and Q mean. The
conclusion is a first-order consequence of the two premises.
This technique of adding a premise whose truth is justified by the meanings
of the predicates is one aspect of what is known as the axiomatic method. It is axiomatic method
often possible to bridge the gap between the intuitive notion of consequence
and the more restricted notion of first-order consequence by systematically
expressing facts about the predicates involved in our inferences. The sentences
used to express these facts are sometimes called meaning postulates, a special
type of axiom. meaning postulates
Suppose we wanted to write out axioms that bridged the gap between first-
order consequence and the intuitive notion of consequence that weve been
using in connection with the blocks language. That would be a big task, but
we can make a start on it by axiomatizing the shape predicates. We might
begin by taking four basic shape axioms as a starting point. These axioms
express the fact that every block has one and only one shape.
1. x (Cube(x) Tet(x))
3. x (Dodec(x) Cube(x))
Section 10.5
288 / The Logic of Quantifiers
The first three axioms stem from the meanings of our three basic shape
predicates. Being one of these shapes simply precludes being another. The
fourth axiom, however, is presumably not part of the meaning of the three
predicates, as there are certainly other possible shapes. Still, if our goal is to
capture reasoning about blocks worlds of the sort that can be built in Tarskis
World, we will want to include 4 as an axiom.
Any argument that is intuitively valid and involves only the three ba-
sic shape predicates is first-order valid if we add these axioms as additional
premises. For example, the following intuitively valid argument is not first-
order valid:
x Tet(x)
x (Cube(x) Dodec(x))
x Tet(x)
x (Dodec(x) Cube(x))
x (Tet(x) Dodec(x) Cube(x))
x (Cube(x) Dodec(x))
This argument is first-order valid, as can be seen by replacing the shape
predicates with meaningless predicates, say P, Q, and R:
x P(x)
x (Q(x) R(x))
x (P(x) Q(x) R(x))
x (R(x) Q(x))
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open the Fitch file Axioms 1. The premises in this file are just the four basic
shape axioms. Below the Fitch bar are four sentences. Each is justified by
a use of the rule Ana Con, without any sentences cited in support. Verify
that each of the steps checks out.
Chapter 10
The axiomatic method / 289
2. Now change each of the justifications from Ana Con to FO Con. Verify
that none of the steps now checks out. See if you can make each of them
check out by finding a single shape axiom to cite in its support.
We will not in fact add this as an axiom since, as we will see in Chapter 12, it
leaves out essential facts about the relation between SameShape and the basic
shape predicates. When we add these other facts, it turns out that the above
axiom is unnecessary.
Axiomatization has another interesting use that can be illustrated with our
axioms about shape. Notice that if we systematically replace the predicates
Cube, Tet, and Dodec by the predicates Small, Medium, and Large, the resulting
sentences are true in all of the blocks worlds. It follows from this that if we
take any valid argument involving just the shape predicates and perform the
stated substitution, the result will be another valid argument.
The intuitive dierence between the first three shape axioms and the fourth,
which asserts a general fact about our block worlds but not one that follows
from the meanings of the predicates, highlights an important characteristic
of much everyday reasoning. More often than not, when we reason, we do so
against the background of an assumed range of possibilities. When you reason
about Tarskis World, it is natural to presuppose the various constraints that assuming a range
have been built into the program. When you reason about what movie to of possibilities
go to, you implicitly presuppose that your options are limited to the movies
showing in the vicinity.
The inferences that you make against this background may not, strictly
speaking, be logically valid. That is, they may be correct relative to the pre-
supposed circumstances but not correct relative to some broader range of pos-
sibilities. For example, if you reason from Cube(d) and Tet(d) to Dodec(d),
your reasoning is valid within the domain of Tarskis World, but not relative
to worlds where there are spheres and icosohedra. When you decide that the
Section 10.5
290 / The Logic of Quantifiers
latest Harrison Ford movie is the best choice, this may be a correct inference
in your vicinity, but perhaps not if you were willing to fly to other cities.
In general, background assumptions about the range of relevant circum-
background stances are not made an explicit part of everyday reasoning, and this can give
assumptions rise to disagreements about the reasonings validity. People with dierent as-
sumptions may come up with very dierent assessments about the validity of
some explicit piece of reasoning. In such cases, it is often helpful to articulate
general facts about the presupposed circumstances. By making these explicit,
we can often identify the source of the disagreement.
The axiomatic method can be thought of as a natural extension of this ev-
eryday process. Using this method, it is often possible to transform arguments
that are valid only relative to a particular range of circumstances into argu-
ments that are first-order valid. The axioms that result express facts about
the meanings of the relevant predicates, but also facts about the presupposed
circumstances.
The history of the axiomatic method is closely entwined with the his-
tory of logic. You were probably already familiar with axioms from studying
Euclidean geometry. In investigating the properties of points, lines, and geo-
metrical shapes, the ancient Greeks discovered the notion of proof which lies
at the heart of deductive reasoning. This came about as follows. By the time
of the Greeks, an enormous number of interesting and important discoveries
about geometrical objects had already been made, some dating back to the
time of the ancient Babylonians. For example, ancient clay tablets show that
the Babylonians knew what is now called the Pythagorean Theorem. But for
the Babylonians, geometry was an empirical science, one whose facts were
discovered by observation.
Somewhere lost in the prehistory of mathematics, someone had a brilliant
idea. They realized that there are logical relationships among the known facts
of geometry. Some follow from others by logic alone. Might it not be possible
to choose a few, relatively clear observations as basic, and derive all the others
axioms and theorems by logic? The starting truths are accepted as axioms, while their consequences
are called theorems. Since the axioms are supposed to be obviously true, and
since the methods of proof are logically valid, we can be sure the theorems
are true as well.
This general procedure for systematizing a body of knowledge became
known as the axiomatic method. A set of axioms is chosen, statements which
we are certain hold of the worlds or circumstances under consideration.
Some of these may be meaning postulates, truths that hold simply in virtue
of meaning. Others may express obvious facts that hold in the domain in
question, facts like our fourth shape axiom. We can be sure that anything
Chapter 10
Lemmas / 291
that follows from the axioms by valid methods of inference is on just as firm
a footing as the axioms from which we start.
Exercises
10.30 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Axioms 1.
10.31 Suppose we state our four basic shape axioms in the following schematic form:
. 1. x (R(x) P(x))
2. x (P(x) Q(x))
3. x (Q(x) R(x))
4. x (P(x) Q(x) R(x))
We noted that any valid argument involving just the three shape predicates remains valid
when you substitute other predicates, like the Tarskis World size predicates, that satisfy these
axioms. Which of the following triplets of properties satisfy the axioms in the indicated domain
(that is, make them true when you substitute them for P, Q, and R)? If they dont, say which
axioms fail and why.
[Note: Your answers in some cases will depend on how you are construing the predicates. The
important thing is that you explain your interpretations clearly, and how the interpretations
lead to the success or failure of the axioms.]
Section 10.6
Lemmas
One important feature of the axiomatic method is that as theorems are proved,
they become available as new facts that can be used in later proofs. If S has
been shown to be a consequence of the axioms, then S can be used in any
proof which employs those same axioms. After all, we could just re-prove S
in the new proof, since all of its premises are available in the new proof, and
then cite S in subsequent inference steps.
For example, suppose that you have proved that
x(Cube(x) Dodec(x) Tet(x))
Section 10.6
292 / The Logic of Quantifiers
follows from the shape axioms that we presented in the previous section. If
you are later asked to prove
from the same axioms, you could simply reproduce the steps of the earlier
proof, and then use the -Intro rule to reach the desired conclusion. But you
have to repeat the work that you already did. That could be a drag if the
proof of the original result is long and complex.
Logicians are a lazy lot, and to avoid repeating work that they have al-
ready done they usually simply say something like we already know that
x(Cube(x) Dodec(x) Tet(x)) follows from the axioms, and so obviously,
x(Cube(x) Dodec(x) Tet(x)) Small(a) does too. They know that if a
picky person were to ask them to justify this move, they could simply repro-
duce the proof. But they know better than to do all that work without having
been asked.
lemmas A result that is used in this way is often called a lemma. Theres nothing
special about a lemma, its a result that has been proved and that is being
used in the course of proving another result. Often a lemma is of little intrinsic
interest but is needed for some larger end, or a result that is generally useful
and will be used in many later proofs. Lemmas have the same formal status
as theorems or propositions, but are usually less important.
Fitch has a rule that takes advantage of the ability to reuse theorems as
lemmas in later proofs. The Lemma rule allows you to use a result that you
have previously proved within a new proof. To use this rule, you must select
a proof file that you have already made, and that file must have a single goal
which checks out. You cite the formulas in your proof which correspond to
the premises in the file, and you are permitted to conclude the goal formula
of that lemma in your proof. Lets try it out.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Lemma 1, which contains a proof of the validity of the fol-
lowing argument
x(Tet(x) Cube(x))
x(Tet(x) Dodec(x))
x(Cube(x) Dodec(x))
x(Tet(x) Cube(x) Dodec(x))
2. Open the file Lemma Example 1, which contains the goal of proving
Chapter 10
Lemmas / 293
x(Tet(x) Cube(x))
x(Tet(x) Dodec(x))
x(Cube(x) Dodec(x))
x(Tet(x) Cube(x) Dodec(x)) Small(a)
Create a new step and insert the formula x(Tet(x) Cube(x) Dodec(x)),
this is the goal formula of Lemma 1. Cite all three premises, which are also
the premises of Lemma 1. Finally, open the Rule menu, and look for the
Lemma item, this is a submenu which initially contains Add Lemma. . ..
Select this item. A file chooser dialog will appear. Navigate to and select
the file Lemma 1. Check the step (it will check out.)
3. The Lemma rule will check out when the formula at the lemma step is
the only goal in the lemma file, the same number of formulas are cited as
there are premises in the lemma file, and these cited steps contain all of
the premise formulas (in any order). The premises and the cited formulas
have to match exactly. If the lemma contains the premises P and Q, for
example, citing the formula P Q wont work.
4. Complete the proof of this exercise by using a single application of -
Intro.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Situations where you can use a lemma arise frequently when doing rea-
soning with a collection of presupposed axioms because every proof in the
collection will share the axioms as common premises. Consequently, results
that are proved only from the axioms will be readily reusable in other proofs.
However there is nothing special about the axioms. As we have seen, they are
just premises used in proofs. If you complete a proof of a result using some
premises, and then you later have exactly the same premises (perhaps in ad-
dition to others) in another proof, then you are entitled to us that previous
result as a lemma.
The premises of the lemma do not even have to be premises of the new
proof as long as they appear in the new proof and can be cited from the step
that uses the lemma. Thus the premises of the lemma could instead be derived
from whatever premises you have in the new proof. For instance, in the next
example, you are required to derive the premises of the lemma before you can
use it.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Lemma 2, which contains a proof of the validity of the fol-
lowing argument:
Section 10.6
294 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Dodec(d) Cube(c)
Dodec(d) Large(d)
Cube(c) Small(c)
Large(d) Small(c)
2. Open the file Lemma Example 2, which contains the goal of proving:
Dodec(d) Cube(c)
x(Dodec(x) Large(x))
x(Cube(x) Small(x))
Large(d) Small(c)
3. Notice that the second and third premises of the lemma are instances of
the second and third premises of this proof, respectively. We can complete
the proof by deriving those formula, and then applying the lemma.
First, use -Elim to derive the formula Dodec(d) Large(d) in the first
non-premise step of the proof. In the next step, again use -Elim to derive
the formula Cube(c) Small(c). Finally complete the proof by applying
the lemma.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Whenever you prove a result, you want it to be as general as possible just
in case you will need to use this result as a lemma in a later proof. If you look
closely at the proof in the file Lemma 2 which you used in the shape axioms,
you will notice that only one of the premises of the lemma is used in the proof
of the lemma. That means that the number of situations in which the lemma
can be used is much smaller than it needs to be, since to use the lemma we
have to be able to cite all of the premises. We want the number of premises
to be as small as possible to ensure that the proof is most general and most
useful. In fact, even if the proof is never used as the lemma, we want this to
be true, since otherwise we might be fooled into believing that the result is
more specific than it actually is.
There is another kind of generality that is very important. Imagine that
we had a proof of the following result:
(Tet(a) Small(b))
Tet(a) Small(b)
This is, of course, an instance of De Morgans laws where the specific for-
mula Tet(a) and Small(b) are used. We know that this argument is valid re-
gardless of the sentences that are chosen in place of Tet(a) and Small(b), a
fact that we usually express by
Chapter 10
Lemmas / 295
(P Q)
P Q
Because the general form of the result is valid we know that any specific
instance is valid. Ideally, we could prove the result in the general form, and
then use the general form as a lemma any time that a specific instance of the
result is needed. The Lemma rule in Fitch allows us to do exactly that.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Lemma 3, which contains a proof of the validity of the fol-
lowing argument
AB
AC
BD
CD
2. Open the file Lemma Example 3, which asks you to prove the following
argument:
LeftOf(a, b) RightOf(a, b)
LeftOf(a, b) (Small(a) Tet(a))
RightOf(a, b) (Large(b) Cube(b))
(Small(a) Tet(a)) (Large(b) Cube(b))
3. Notice that the two arguments have identical form. Lemma 3 contains a
proof that arguments of a general form (known as constructive dilemma)
are valid, while Lemma Example 3 contains a particular instance of this
result.
4. Add a new step to Lemma Example 3, and insert the goal formula. Cite
all three premises, and use the Lemma rule, selecting the file Lemma 3.
Verify that the step checks out.
This works because it is possible to substitute specific formulas from the
step in Lemma Example 3 for the general formulas in the lemma, so that the
citations and conclusion of the step are obtained. In this case we substitute:
A by LeftOf(a, b)
B by RightOf(a, b)
C by Small(a) Tet(a)
D by Large(b) Cube(b)
Section 10.6
296 / The Logic of Quantifiers
Remember
1. Lemmas are just proofs that you have completed that are being used
to justify a step in another proof.
2. Fitchs lemma rule requires that each cited formula matches a premise
in the lemma file, and the derived formula matches the goal of the
lemma file.
Exercises
10.32 If you skipped the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files Proof
Lemma Example 1, Proof Lemma Example 2 and Proof Lemma Example 3.
10.33 Which of the following arguments can be justified by a single application of Lemma 3? For each
. one that can be justified, turn in the substitution of formulas that is required to justify the
application. For each argument that cannot be justified, explain why not.
1. Cube(a) Cube(b)
Cube(b) SameSize(a, b)
Cube(a) SameShape(a, b)
SameSize(a, b) SameShape(a, b)
Chapter 10
Lemmas / 297
2. Tet(a) Tet(b)
Tet(b) Larger(e, f)
Tet(a) Smaller(f, e)
Smaller(f, e) Larger(e, f)
4. Tet(e)
Tet(e) Small(e)
Tet(e) SameSize(e, e)
Small(e) SameSize(e, e)
5. LeftOf(a, b) Smaller(a, b)
Smaller(a, b) P
LeftOf(a, b) Q
QP
10.34 Prove a single lemma which can be used to complete each of the proofs in the files Exer-
cise 10.34.1 and Exercise 10.34.2 in one step using the Lemma rule. Submit the lemma file as
Proof 10.34.
Section 10.6
Chapter 11
Multiple Quantifiers
So far, weve considered only sentences that contain a single quantifier symbol.
This was enough to express the simple quantified forms studied by Aristotle,
but hardly shows the expressive power of the modern quantifiers of first-order
logic. Where the quantifiers of fol come into their own is in expressing claims
which, in English, involve several quantified noun phrases.
Long, long ago, probably before you were even born, there was an advertis-
ing campaign that ended with the tag line: Everybody doesnt like something,
but nobody doesnt like Sara Lee. Now theres a quantified sentence! It goes
without saying that this was every logicians favorite ad campaign. Or con-
sider Lincolns famous line: You may fool all of the people some of the time;
you can even fool some of the people all of the time; but you cant fool all of
the people all of the time. Why, the mind reels!
To express claims like these, and to reveal their logic, we need to juggle
more than one quantifier in a single sentence. But it turns out that, like
juggling, this requires a fair bit of preparation and practice.
Section 11.1
Multiple uses of a single quantifier
When you learn to juggle, you start by tossing balls in a single hand, not
crossing back and forth.1 Well start by looking at sentences that have multiple
instances of , or multiple instances of , but no mixing of the two. Here are
a couple of sentences that contain multiple quantifiers:
x y [Cube(x) Tet(y) LeftOf(x, y)]
x y [(Cube(x) Tet(y)) LeftOf(x, y)]
Try to guess what these say. You shouldnt have any trouble: The first says
that some cube is left of a tetrahedron; the second says that every cube is left
of every tetrahedron.
In these examples, all the quantifiers are out in front (in what well later
call prenex form) but there is no need for them to be. In fact the same claims
could be expressed, perhaps more clearly, by the following sentences:
1 We thank juggler and Stanford student, Daniel Jacobs, for pointing out that this is not,
in fact, how most beginning jugglers are taught. However, we prefer the simile to the facts.
298
Multiple uses of a single quantifier / 299
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Suppose you are evaluating the following sentence in a world with four
cubes lined up in the front row:
2. Open Cantors Sentences and Cantors World, and evaluate the first sentence
in the world. If you are surprised by the outcome, play the game committed
to the truth of the sentence.
4. If we really wanted to express the claim that every cube is to the left or
right of every other cube, then we would have to write
Modify the first sentence in this way and check it in the world.
Section 11.1
300 / Multiple Quantifiers
5. The second sentence in the file looks for all the world like it says there are
two cubes. But it doesnt. Delete all but one cube in the world and check
to see that its still true. Play the game committed to false and see what
happens.
6. See if you can modify the second sentence so it is false in a world with only
one cube, but true if there are two or more. (Use = like we did above.)
Save the modified sentences as Sentences Multiple 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
identity and In general, to say that every pair of distinct objects stands in some relation,
variables you need a sentence of the form x y (x = y . . . ), and to say that there
are two objects with a certain property, you need a sentence of the form
x y (x = y . . . ). Of course, other parts of the sentence often guarantee the
distinctness for you. For example if you say that every tetrahedron is larger
than every cube:
x y ((Tet(x) Cube(y)) Larger(x, y))
then the fact that x must be a tetrahedron and y a cube ensures that your
claim says what you intended.
Remember
When evaluating a sentence with multiple quantifiers, dont fall into the
trap of thinking that distinct variables range over distinct objects. In fact,
the sentence x y P(x, y) logically implies x P(x, x), and the sentence
x P(x, x) logically implies x y P(x, y)!
Exercises
11.1 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Sentences
Multiple 1.
11.2 (Simple multiple quantifier sentences) The file Freges Sentences contains 14 sentences; the first
seven begin with a pair of existential quantifiers, the second seven with a pair of universal
quantifiers. Go through the sentences one by one, evaluating them in Peirces World. Though
you probably wont have any trouble understanding these sentences, dont forget to use the
game if you do. When you understand all the sentences, modify the size and location of a single
block so that the first seven sentences are true and the second seven false. Submit the resulting
world.
Chapter 11
Multiple uses of a single quantifier / 301
11.3 (Getting fancier) Open up Peanos World and Peanos Sentences. The sentence file contains 30
assertions that Alex made about this world. Evaluate Alexs claims. If you have trouble with
any, play the game (several times if necessary) until you see where you are going wrong. Then
change each of Alexs false claims into a true claim. If you can make the sentence true by
adding a clause of the form x = y, do so. Otherwise, see if you can turn the false claim into
an interesting truth: dont just add a negation sign to the front of the sentence. Submit your
corrected list of sentences.
11.4 (Describing a world) Lets try our hand describing a world using multiple quantifiers. Open
Finslers World and start a new sentence file.
1. Notice that all the small blocks are in front of all the large blocks. Use your first
sentence to say this.
2. With your second sentence, point out that theres a cube that is larger than a tetra-
hedron.
3. Next, say that all the cubes are in the same column.
4. Notice, however, that this is not true of the tetrahedra. So write the same sentence
about the tetrahedra, but put a negation sign out front.
5. Every cube is also in a dierent row from every other cube. Say this.
6. Again, this isnt true of the tetrahedra, so say that its not.
7. Notice there are dierent tetrahedra that are the same size. Express this fact.
8. But there arent dierent cubes of the same size, so say that, too.
Are all your translations true in Finslers World? If not, try to figure out why. In fact, play
around with the world and see if your first-order sentences always have the same truth values
as the claims you meant to express. Check them out in Konigs World, where all of the original
claims are false. Are your sentences all false? When you think youve got them right, submit
your sentence file.
11.5 (Building a world) Open Ramseys Sentences. Build a world in which sentences 110 are all true
at once (ignore sentences 1120 for now). These first ten sentences all make either particular
claims (that is, they contain no quantifiers) or existential claims (that is, they assert that things
of a certain sort exist). Consequently, you could make them true by successively adding objects
to the world. But part of the exercise is to make them all true with as few objects as possible.
You should be able to do it with a total of six objects. So rather than adding objects for each
new sentence, only add new objects when absolutely necessary. Again, be sure to go back and
check that all the sentences are true when you are finished. Submit your world as World 11.5.
[Hint: To make all the sentences true with six blocks, you will have to watch out for some
intentionally misleading implicatures. For example, one of the objects will have to have two
names.]
Section 11.1
302 / Multiple Quantifiers
11.6 (Modifying the world) Sentences 11-20 of Ramseys Sentences all make universal claims. That is,
they all say that every object in the world has some property or other. Check to see whether the
world you have built in Exercise 11.5 satisfies the universal claims expressed by these sentences.
If not, modify the world so it makes all 20 sentences true at once. Submit your modified world
as World 11.6. (Make sure you submit both World 11.5 and World 11.6 to get credit for both
exercises.)
11.7 (Block parties) The interaction of quantifiers and negation gives rise to subtleties that can be
|. pretty confusing. Open L owenheims Sentences, which contains eight sentences divided into two
sets. Suppose we imagine a column containing blocks to be a party and think of the blocks in
the column as the attendees. Well say a party is lonely if theres only one block attending it,
and say a party is exclusive if theres any block whos not there (i.e., whos in another column).
1. Using this terminology, give simple and clear English renditions of each of the sentences.
For example, sentence 2 says some of the parties are not lonely, and sentence 7 says theres
only one party. Youll find sentences 4 and 9 the hardest to understand. Construct a lot
of worlds to see what they mean.
2. With the exception of 4 and 9, all of the sentences are first-order equivalent to other
sentences on the list, or to negations of other sentences (or both). Which sentences are 3
and 5 equivalent to? Which sentences do 3 and 5 negate?
3. Sentences 4 and 9 are logically independent: its possible for the two to have any pattern
of truth values. Construct four worlds: one in which both are true (World 11.7.1), one
in which 4 is true and 9 false (World 11.7.2), one in which 4 is false and 9 true (World
11.7.3), and one in which both are false (World 11.7.4).
Submit the worlds youve constructed and turn the remaining answers in to your instructor.
Section 11.2
Mixed quantifiers
Ready to start juggling with both hands? We now turn to the important case
in which universal and existential quantifiers get mixed together. Lets start
with the following sentence:
This sentence shouldnt throw you. It has the overall Aristotelian form
x [P(x) Q(x)], which we have seen many times before. It says that every
cube has some property or other. What property? The property expressed
Chapter 11
Mixed quantifiers / 303
by y (Tet(y) LeftOf(x, y)), that is, the property of being left of a tetrahe-
dron. Thus our first-order sentence claims that every cube is to the left of a
tetrahedron.
This same claim could also be expressed in a number of other ways. The
most important alternative puts the quantifiers all out front, in prenex form.
Though the prenex form is less natural as a translation of the English, Every
cube is left of some tetrahedron, it is logically equivalent:
Section 11.2
304 / Multiple Quantifiers
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the files Mixed Sentences and Konigs World. If you evaluate the two
sentences, youll see that the first is true and the second false. Were going
to play the game to see why they arent both true.
2. Play the game on the first sentence, specifying your initial commitment as
true. Since this sentence is indeed true, you should find it easy to win.
When Tarskis World makes its choice, all you need to do is choose any
block in the same row as Tarskis.
3. Now play the game with the second sentence, again specifying your ini-
tial commitment as true. This time Tarskis World is going to beat you
because youve got to choose first. As soon as you choose a block, Tarski
chooses a block in the other row. Play a couple of times, choosing blocks
in dierent rows. See whos got the advantage now?
4. Just for fun, delete a row of blocks so that both of the sentences come out
true. Now you can win the game. So there, Tarski! She who laughs last
laughs best. Save the modified world as World Mixed 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
order of variables Have you noticed that switching the order of the quantifiers does something
quite dierent from switching around the variables in the body of the sentence?
For example, consider the sentences
x y Likes(x, y)
x y Likes(y, x)
Assuming our domain consists of people, the first of these says that everybody
likes somebody or other, while the second says everybody is liked by somebody
or other. These are both very dierent claims from either of these:
y x Likes(x, y)
y x Likes(y, x)
Here, the first claims that there is a (very popular) person whom everybody
likes, while the second claims that there is a (very indiscriminate?) person
who likes absolutely everyone.
In the last section, we saw how using two existential quantifiers and the
identity predicate, we can say that there are at least two things with a par-
ticular property (say cubes):
x y (x = y Cube(x) Cube(y))
Chapter 11
Mixed quantifiers / 305
With mixed quantifiers and identity, we can say quite a bit more. For example,
consider the sentence
This says that there is a cube, and furthermore every cube is identical to it. exactly one
Some cube, in other words, is the only cube. Thus, this sentence will be true
if and only if there is exactly one cube. There are many ways of saying things
like this in fol; well run across others in the exercises. We discuss numerical
claims more systematically in Chapter 14.
Remember
When you are dealing with mixed quantifiers, the order is very important.
x y R(x, y) is not logically equivalent to y x R(x, y).
Exercises
11.8 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file World Mixed 1.
11.9 (Simple mixed quantifier sentences) Open Hilberts Sentences and Peanos World. Evaluate the
sentences one by one, playing the game if an evaluation surprises you. Once you understand
the sentences, modify the false ones by adding a single negation sign so that they come out
true. The catch is that you arent allowed to add the negation sign to the front of the sentence!
Add it to an atomic formula, if possible, and try to make the claim nonvacuously true. (This
wont always be possible.) Make sure you understand both why the original sentence is false
and why your modified sentence is true. When youre done, submit your sentence list with the
changes.
11.10 (Mixed quantifier sentences with identity) Open Leibnizs World and use it to evaluate the
sentences in Leibnizs Sentences. Make sure you understand all the sentences and follow any
instructions in the file. Submit your modified sentence list.
11.11 (Building a world) Create a world in which all ten sentences in Arnaults Sentences are true.
Submit your world.
11.12 (Name that object) Open Carrolls World and Hercules Sentences. Try to figure out which objects
have names, and what they are. You should be able to figure this out from the sentences, all
of which are true. Once you have come to your conclusion, add the names to the objects and
check to see if all the sentences are true. Submit your modified world.
Section 11.2
306 / Multiple Quantifiers
The remaining three exercises all have to do with the sentences in the file Buridans Sentences and build
on one another.
11.13 (Building a world) Open Buridans Sentences. Build a world in which all ten sentences are true.
Submit your world.
11.14 (Consequence) These two English sentences are consequences of the ten sentences in Buridans
Sentences.
1. There are no cubes.
2. There is exactly one large tetrahedron.
Because of this, they must be true in any world in which Buridans sentences are all true. So
of course they must be true in World 11.13, no matter how you built it.
Translate the two sentences, adding them to the list in Buridans Sentences. Name the
expanded list Sentences 11.14. Verify that they are all true in World 11.13.
Modify the world by adding a cube. Try placing it at various locations and giving it
various sizes to see what happens to the truth values of the sentences in your file. One or
more of the original ten sentences will always be false, though dierent ones at dierent
times. Find a world in which only one of the original ten sentences is false and name it
World 11.14.1.
Next, get rid of the cube and add a second large tetrahedron. Again, move it around and
see what happens to the truth values of the sentences. Find a world in which only one of
the original ten sentences is false and name it World 11.14.2.
11.15 (Independence) Show that the following sentence is independent of those in Buridans Sentences,
that is, neither it nor its negation is a consequence of those sentences.
You will do this by building two worlds, one in which this sentence is false (call this
World 11.15.1) and one in which it is true (World 11.15.2)but both of which make all of
Buridans sentences true.
Chapter 11
The step-by-step method of translation / 307
Section 11.3
The step-by-step method of translation
When an English sentence contains more than one quantified noun phrase,
translating it can become quite confusing unless you approach it in a very
systematic way. It often helps to go through a few intermediate steps, treating
the quantified noun phrases one at a time.
Suppose, for example, we wanted to translate the sentence Each cube is
to the left of a tetrahedron. Here, there are two quantified noun phrases: each
cube and a tetrahedron. We can start by dealing with the first noun phrase,
temporarily treating the complex phrase is-to-the-left-of-a-tetrahedron as a
single unit. In other words, we can think of the sentence as a single quantifier
sentence, on the order of Each cube is small. The translation would look like
this:
x (Cube(x) x is-to-the-left-of-a-tetrahedron)
Substituting this in the above, we get the desired translation of the original
English sentence:
This is exactly the sentence with which we began our discussion of mixed
quantifiers.
This step-by-step process really comes into its own when there are lots of
quantifiers in a sentence. It would be very dicult for a beginner to trans-
late a sentence like No cube to the right of a tetrahedron is to the left of a
larger dodecahedron in a single blow. Using the step-by-step method makes it
straightforward. Eventually, though, you will be able to translate quite com-
plex sentences, going through the intermediate steps in your head.
Section 11.3
308 / Multiple Quantifiers
Exercises
1. Every cube is to the left of every tetrahedron. [In the Sentence window, you
see the halfway completed translation, together with some blanks that need to
be replaced by ws. Commented out below this, you will find an intermediate
sentence. Make sure you understand how we got to this intermediate stage of
the translation. Then complete the translation by replacing the blank with
Once this is done, check to see if you have a well-formed sentence. Does it look
like a proper translation of the original English? It should.]
2. Every small cube is in back of a large cube.
3. Some cube is in front of every tetrahedron.
4. A large cube is in front of a small cube.
5. Nothing is larger than everything.
6. Every cube in front of every tetrahedron is large.
7. Everything to the right of a large cube is small.
8. Nothing in back of a cube and in front of a cube is large.
9. Anything with nothing in back of it is a cube.
10. Every dodecahedron is smaller than some tetrahedron.
Open Peirces World. Notice that all the English sentences are true in this world. Check
to see that all of your translations are true as well. If they are not, see if you can figure
out where you went wrong.
Open Leibnizs World. Note that the English sentences 5, 6, 8, and 10 are true in this
world, while the rest are false. Verify that your translations have the same truth values.
If they dont, fix them.
Open Rons World. Here, the true sentences are 2, 3, 4, 5, and 8. Check that your trans-
lations have the right values, and correct them if they dont.
Chapter 11
Paraphrasing Englishparaphrasing English / 309
11.17 (More multiple quantifier sentences) Now, we will try translating some multiple quantifier
sentences completely from scratch. You should try to use the step-by-step procedure.
Start a new sentence file and translate the following English sentences.
Open Bolzanos World. All of the above English sentences are true in this world. Verify
that all your translations are true as well.
Now open Rons World. The English sentences 4, 5, 8, 9, and 10 are true, but the rest are
false. Verify that the same holds of your translations.
Open Claires World. Here you will find that the English sentences 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 10
are true, the rest false. Again, check to see that your translations have the appropriate
truth value.
Finally, open Peanos World. Notice that only sentences 8 and 9 are true. Check to see
that your translations have the same truth values.
Section 11.4
Paraphrasing English
Section 11.4
310 / Multiple Quantifiers
The problem is that this translation is not a sentence, since the last occur-
rence of x is free. However, we can paraphrase the sentences as Every freshman
who takes a logic class must be smart. This is easily treated by the procedure,
with the result being
What makes such a sentence a bit tricky is the existential noun phrase a
donkey in the noun phrase every farmer who owns a donkey. The existential
noun phrase serves as the antecedent of the pronoun it in the verb phrase;
its the donkey that gets beaten. Applying the step-by-step method might lead
you to translate this as follows:
This translation, however, cannot be correct since its not even a sentence; the
occurrence of y in Beats(x, y) is free, not bound. If we move the parenthesis
to capture this free variable, we obtain the following, which means something
quite dierent from our English sentence.
This means that everything in the domain of discourse is a farmer who owns
and beats a donkey, something which neither implies nor is implied by the
original sentence.
To get a correct first-order translation of the original donkey sentence, it
can be paraphrased as
Chapter 11
Paraphrasing Englishparaphrasing English / 311
Remember
In translating from English to fol, the goal is to get a sentence that has
the same meaning as the original. This sometimes requires changes in the
surface form of the sentence.
Exercises
11.18 (Sentences that need paraphrasing before translation) Translate the following sentences by first
giving a suitable English paraphrase. Some of them are donkey sentences, so be careful.
1. Only large objects have nothing in front of them.
2. If a cube has something in front of it, then its small.
3. Every cube in back of a dodecahedron is also smaller than it.
4. If e is between two objects, then they are both small.
5. If a tetrahedron is between two objects, then they are both small.
Open Rons World. Recall that there are lots of hidden things in this world. Each of the above
English sentences is true in this world, so the same should hold of your translations. Check to
see that it does. Now open Bolzanos World. In this world, only sentence 3 is true. Check that
the same holds of your translations. Next open Wittgensteins World. In this world, only the
English sentence 5 is true. Verify that your translations have the same truth values. Submit
your sentence file.
11.19 (More sentences that need paraphrasing before translation) Translate the following sentences
by first giving a suitable English paraphrase.
1. Every dodecahedron is as large as every cube. [Hint: Since we do not have anything
corresponding to as large as (by which we mean at least as large as) in our language,
you will first need to paraphrase this predicate using larger than or same size as.]
2. If a cube is to the right of a dodecahedron but not in back of it, then it is as large as
the dodecahedron.
3. No cube with nothing to its left is between two cubes.
4. The only large cubes are b and c.
5. At most b and c are large cubes. [Note: There is a significant dierence between this
sentence and the previous one. This one does not imply that b and c are large cubes,
while the previous sentence does.]
Open Rons World. Each of the above English sentences is true in this world, so
the same should hold of your translations. Check to see that it does. Now open
Bolzanos World. In this world, only sentences 3 and 5 are true. Check that the
Section 11.4
312 / Multiple Quantifiers
same holds of your translations. Next open Wittgensteins World. In this world, only the English
sentences 2 and 3 are true. Verify that your translations have the same truth values. Submit
your sentence file.
11.20 (More translations) The following English sentences are true in Godels World. Translate them,
and make sure your translations are also true. Then modify the world in various ways, and
check that your translations track the truth value of the English sentence.
1. Nothing to the left of a is larger than everything to the left of b.
2. Nothing to the left of a is smaller than anything to the left of b.
3. The same things are left of a as are left of b.
4. Anything to the left of a is smaller than something that is in back of every cube to the
right of b.
5. Every cube is smaller than some dodecahedron but no cube is smaller than every do-
decahedron.
6. If a is larger than some cube then it is smaller than every tetrahedron.
7. Only dodecahedra are larger than everything else.
8. All objects with nothing in front of them are tetrahedra.
9. Nothing is between two objects which are the same shape.
10. Nothing but a cube is between two other objects.
11. b has something behind it which has at least two objects behind it.
12. More than one thing is smaller than something larger than b.
11.21 Using the symbols introduced in Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following into fol. Do
not introduce any additional names or predicates. Comment on any shortcomings in your
translations. When you are done, submit your sentence file and turn in your comments to your
instructor.
1. Every student gave a pet to some other student sometime or other.
2. Claire is not a student unless she owned a pet (at some time or other).
3. No one ever owned both Folly and Scruy at the same time.
4. No student fed every pet.
5. No one who owned a pet at 2:00 was angry.
6. No one gave Claire a pet this morning. (Assume that this morning simply means
before 12:00.)
7. If Max ever gave Claire a pet, she owned it then and he didnt.
8. You cant give someone something you dont own.
9. Max fed all of his pets before Claire fed any of her pets. (Assume that Maxs pets
are the pets he owned at 2:00, and the same for Claire.)
10. Max gave Claire a pet between 2:00 and 3:00. It was hungry.
Chapter 11
Ambiguity and context sensitivity / 313
11.22 Using the symbols introduced in Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following into colloquial
. English. Assume that each of the sentences is asserted at 2 p.m. on January 2, 2011, and
use this fact to make your translations more natural. For example, you could translate
Owned(max, folly, 2:00) as Max owns Folly.
1. x [Student(x) z (Pet(z) Owned(x, z, 2:00))]
2. x [Student(x) z (Pet(z) Owned(x, z, 2:00))]
3. x t [Gave(max, x, claire, t) y t Gave(claire, x, y, t )]
4. x [Owned(claire, x, 2:00) t (t < 2:00 Gave(max, x, claire, t))]
5. x t (1:55 < t t < 2:00 Gave(max, x, claire, t))
6. y [Person(y) x t (1:55 < t t < 2:00 Gave(max, x, y, t))]
7. z {Student(z) y [Person(y) x t (1:55 < t t < 2:00
Gave(z, x, y, t))]}
11.23 Translate the following into fol. As usual, explain the meanings of the names, predicates, and
. function symbols you use, and comment on any shortcomings in your translations.
1. Theres a sucker born every minute.
2. Whither thou goest, I will go.
3. Soothsayers make a better living in the world than truthsayers.
4. To whom nothing is given, nothing can be required.
5. If you always do right, you will gratify some people and astonish the rest.
Section 11.5
Ambiguity and context sensitivity
There are a couple of things that make the task of translating between English
and first-order logic dicult. One is the sparseness of primitive concepts in
fol. While this sparseness makes the language easy to learn, it also means
that there are frequently no very natural ways of saying what you want to
say. You have to try to find circumlocutions available with the resources at
hand. While this is often possible in mathematical discourse, it is frequently
impossible for ordinary English. (We will return to this matter later.)
The other thing that makes it dicult is that English is rife with ambi- ambiguity
guities, whereas the expressions of first-order logic are unambiguous (at least
if the predicates used are unambiguous). Thus, confronted with a sentence
of English, we often have to choose one among many possible interpretations
in deciding on an appropriate translation. Just which is appropriate usually
depends on context.
The ambiguities become especially vexing with quantified noun phrases.
Consider, for example, the following joke, taken from Saturday Night Live:
Section 11.5
314 / Multiple Quantifiers
What makes this joke possible is the ambiguity in the first sentence. The most
natural reading would be translated by
But the second sentence forces us to go back and reinterpret the first in a
rather unlikely way, one that would be translated by
This is often called the strong reading, the first the weak reading, since
this one entails the first but not vice versa.
Notice that the reason the strong translation is less likely is not determined
context sensitivity by the form of the original sentence. You can find examples of the same form
where the strong reading is more natural. For example, suppose you have been
out all day and, upon returning to your room, your roommate says, Every
ten minutes some guy from the registrars oce has called trying to reach
you. Here it is the strong reading where the existential some guy is given
wide scope that is most likely the one intended.
There is another important way in which context often helps us disam-
biguate an ambiguous utterance or claim. We often speak about situations
that we can see, and say something about it in a way that makes perfectly
clear, given that what we see. Someone looking at the same scene typically
finds it clear and unambiguous, while someone to whom the scene is not visible
may find our utterance quite unclear. Lets look at an example.
You try it
................................................................
1. It is hard to get too many blocks to adjoin a single block in Tarskis
World, because many of the blocks overflow their squares and so do not
leave room for similar sized blocks on adjacent squares. How many medium
dodecahedra do you think it is possible to have adjacent to a single medium
cube?
2. Open Andersons First World. Notice that this world has four medium do-
decahedra surrounding a single medium cube.
3. Imagine that Max makes the following claim about this situation:
Chapter 11
Ambiguity and context sensitivity / 315
4. There is, however, another reading of Maxs sentence. Imagine that a
tyrant tetrahedron is determined to assassinate any medium dodecahe-
dron with the erontery to be adjacent to a medium cube. Open Ander-
sons Second World and assume that Max makes a claim about this world
with the above sentence. Here a weaker reading of his claim would be the
more reasonable, one where Max is asserting that at least four medium
dodecahedra are each adjacent to some medium cube or other.
5. We would ask you to translate these two readings of the one sentence
into fol, but unfortunately you have not yet learned how translate at
least four into fol yet; this will come in Chapter 14 (see Exercise 14.5 in
particular). Instead consider the following sentence:
Write the stronger and weaker translations in a file, in that order. Check
that the stronger reading is only true in the first of Andersons worlds,
while the weaker reading is true in both. Save your file as Sentences Max 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
The problems of translation are much more dicult when we look at ex-
tended discourse, where more than one sentence comes in. To get a feeling for extended discourse
the diculty, we start of with a couple of problems about extended discourse.
Remember
Section 11.5
316 / Multiple Quantifiers
Exercises
11.24 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Save your sentence file as
Sentences Max 1.
There are (at least) two cubes. There is something between them. It is a medium
dodecahedron. It is in front of a large dodecahedron. These two are left of a small
dodecahedron. There are two tetrahedra.
Translate this discourse into a single first-order sentence. Check to see that your trans-
lation is true. Now check to see that your translation is false in Reichenbachs World
2.
Open Reichenbachs World 2. Check to see that all of the sentences in the following
discourse are true in this world.
Translate this into a single first-order sentence. Check to see that your translation is
true. Now check to see that your translation is false in Reichenbachs World 1. However,
note that the English sentences in the two discourses are in fact exactly the same; they
have just been rearranged! The moral of this exercise is that the correct translation of a
sentence into first-order logic (or any other language) can be very dependent on context.
Submit your sentence file.
11.26 (Ambiguity) Use Tarskis World to create a new sentence file and use it to translate the following
sentences into fol. Each of these sentences is ambiguous, so you should have two dierent
translations of each. Put the two translations of sentence 1 in slots 1 and 2, the two translations
of sentence 3 in slots 3 and 4, and so forth.
1. Every cube is between a pair of dodecahedra.
3. Every cube to the right of a dodecahedron is smaller than it is.
5. Cube a is not larger than every dodecahedron.
Chapter 11
Translations using function symbols / 317
Now open Carrolls World. Which of your sentences are true in this world? You should find that
exactly one translation of each sentence is true. If not, you should correct one or both of your
translations. Notice that if you had had the world in front of you when you did the translations,
it would have been harder to see the ambiguity in the English sentences. The world would have
provided a context that made one interpretation the natural one. Submit your sentence file.
(Ambiguity and inference) Whether or not an argument is valid often hinges on how some ambiguous
claim is taken. Here are two arguments, each of whose first premise is ambiguous. Translate each
argument into fol twice, corresponding to the ambiguity in the first premise. (In 11.27, ignore the
reading where someone means everyone.) Under one translation the conclusion follows: prove it.
Under the other, it does not: describe a situation in which the premises are true but the conclusion false.
11.27 Everyone admires someone who has 11.28 All that glitters is not gold.
. red hair. . This ring glitters.
Anyone who admires himself is con-
This ring is not gold.
ceited.
Someone with red hair is conceited.
Section 11.6
Translations using function symbols
Intuitively, functions are a kind of relation. Ones mother is ones mother
because of a certain relationship you and she bear to one another. Similarly, relations and functions
2 + 3 = 5 because of a certain relationship between two, three, and five.
Building on this intuition, it is not hard to see that anything that can be
expressed in fol with function symbols can also be expressed in a version of
fol where the function symbols have been replaced by relation symbols.
The basic idea can be illustrated easily. Let us use mother as a unary
function symbol, but MotherOf as a binary relation symbol. Thus, for example,
mother(max) = nancy and MotherOf(nancy, max) both state that Nancy is the
mother of Max.
The basic claim is that anything we can say with the function symbol we
can say in some other way using the relation symbol. As an example, here is
a simple sentence using the function symbol:
x OlderThan(mother(x), x)
Section 11.6
318 / Multiple Quantifiers
It expresses the claim that a persons mother is always older than the person.
To express the same thing with the relation symbol, we might write
x y [MotherOf(y, x) OlderThan(y, x)]
Actually, one might wonder whether the second sentence quite manages to
express the claim made by the first, since all it says is that everyone has at
least one mother who is older than they are. One might prefer something like
x y [MotherOf(y, x) OlderThan(y, x)]
This says that every mother of everyone is older than they are. But this too
seems somewhat deficient. A still better translation would be to conjoin one of
the above sentences with the following two sentences which, together, assert
that the relation of being the mother of someone is functional. Everyone has
at least one, and everyone has at most one.
x y MotherOf(y, x)
and
x y z [(MotherOf(y, x) MotherOf(z, x)) y = z]
We will study this sort of thing much more in Chapter 14, where we will
see that these two sentences can jointly be expressed by one rather opaque
sentence:
x y [MotherOf(y, x) z [MotherOf(z, x) y = z]]
And, if we wanted to, we could then incorporate our earlier sentence and
express the first claim by means of the horrendous looking:
x y [MotherOf(y, x) OlderThan(y, x) z [MotherOf(z, x) y = z]]
By now it should be clearer why function symbols are so useful. Look at all
the connectives and additional quantifiers that have come into translating our
very simple sentence
x OlderThan(mother(x), x)
We present some exercises below that will give you practice translating
sentences from English into fol, sentences that show why it is nice to have
function symbols around.
Remember
Anything you can express using an n-ary function symbol can also be
expressed using an n + 1-ary relation symbol, plus the identity predicate,
but at a cost in terms of the complexity of the sentences used.
Chapter 11
Translations using function symbols / 319
Exercises
11.29 Translate the following sentences into fol twice, once using the function symbol mother, once
. using the relation symbol MotherOf.
1. Claires mother is older than Maxs mother.
2. Everyones mothers mother is older than Melanie.
3. Someones mothers mother is younger than Mary.
11.30 Translate the following into a version of fol that has function symbols height, mother, and
. father, the predicate >, and names for the people mentioned.
1. Marys father is taller than Mary but not taller than Claires father.
2. Someone is taller than Claires father.
3. Someones mother is taller than their father.
4. Everyone is taller than someone else.
5. No one is taller than himself.
6. Everyone but J.R. who is taller than Claire is taller than J.R.
7. Everyone who is shorter than Claire is shorter than someone who is shorter than
Melanies father.
8. Someone is taller than Jons paternal grandmother but shorter than his maternal grand-
father.
Say which sentences are true, referring to the table in Figure 9.1 (p. 256). Take the domain of
quantification to be the people mentioned in the table. Turn in your answers.
11.31 Translate the following sentences into the blocks language augmented with the four function
. symbols lm, rm, fm, and bm discussed in Section 1.5 (page 33) and further discussed in con-
nection with quantifiers in Section 9.7 (page 254). Tell which of these sentences are true in
Malcevs World.
1. Every cube is to the right of the leftmost block in the same row.
2. Every block is in the same row as the leftmost block in the same row.
3. Some block is in the same row as the backmost block in the same column.
4. Given any two blocks, the first is the leftmost block in the same row as the second if
and only if there is nothing to the left of the second.
5. Given any two blocks, the first is the leftmost block in the same row as the second if
and only if there is nothing to the left of the second and the the two blocks are in the
same row.
Section 11.6
320 / Multiple Quantifiers
11.32 Using the first-order language of arithmetic described earlier, express each of the following in
. fol.
1. Every number is either 0 or greater than 0.
2. The sum of any two numbers greater than 1 is smaller than the product of the same
two numbers.
3. Every number is even. [This is false, of course.]
4. If x2 = 1 then x = 1. [Hint: Dont forget the implicit quantifier.]
5. For any number x, if ax2 +bx+c = 0 then either x = b+ 2a b2 4ac
or x = b 2a
b2 4ac
.
In this problem treat a, b, c as constants but x as a variable, as usual in algebra.
Section 11.7
Prenex form
x (P(x) . . . )
x (P(x) . . . )
As a result, the translation of (the most likely reading of) a sentence like
Every cube to the left of a tetrahedron is in back of a dodecahedron ends up
looking like
While this is the most natural translation of our sentence, there are sit-
uations where it is not the most convenient one. It is sometimes important
that we be able to rearrange sentences like this so that all the quantifiers are
prenex form out in front and all the connectives in back. Such a sentence is said to be in
prenex form, since all the quantifiers come first.
Stated more precisely, a w is in prenex normal form if either it contains
no quantifiers at all, or else is of the form
Q1 v1 Q2 v2 . . . Qn vn P
Chapter 11
Prenex form / 321
There are several reasons one might want to put sentences into prenex
form. One is that it gives you a nice measure of the logical complexity of the
sentences. What turns out to matter is not so much the number of quantifiers,
as the number of times you get a flip from to or the other way round.
The more of these so-called alternations, the more complex the sentence is, quantifier alternations
logically speaking. Another reason is that this prenex form is quite analogous
to the conjunctive normal form for quantifier-free ws we studied earlier. And
like that normal form, it is used extensively in automated theorem proving.
It turns out that every sentence is logically equivalent to one (in fact many)
in prenex form. In this section we will present some rules for carrying out this
transformation. When we apply the rules to our earlier example, we will get
To arrive at this sentence, we did not just blindly pull quantifiers out in converting to
front. If we had, it would have come out all wrong. There are two problems. prenex form
One is that the first y in the original sentence is, logically speaking, inside
a . (To see why, replace by its definition in terms of and .) The
DeMorgan laws for quantifiers tell us that it will end up being a universal
quantifier. Another problem is that the original sentence has two quantifiers
that bind the variable y. There is no problem with this, but if we pull the
quantifiers out front, there is suddenly a clash. So we must first change one
of the ys to some other variable, say z.
We have already seen the logical equivalences that are needed for putting
sentences in prenex form. They were summarized in a box on page 285. They
allowed us to move negations inside quantifiers by switching quantifiers, to
distribute over , over , to replace bound variables by other variables,
and to move quantifiers past formulas in which the variable being quantified
is not free. In order to apply these maneuvers to sentences with or , one
needs to either replace these symbols with equivalent versions using , and
(or else derive some similar rules for these symbols).
The basic strategy for putting sentences into prenex form is to work from
the inside out, working on parts, then putting them together. By way of
example, here is a chain of equivalences where we start with a sentence not in
prenex normal form and turn it into a logically equivalent one that is prenex
normal form, explaining why we do each step as we go.
x P(x) y Q(y)
In getting a formula into prenex form, its a good idea to get rid of conditionals
in favor of Boolean connectives, since these interact more straightforwardly
Section 11.7
322 / Multiple Quantifiers
x P(x) y Q(y)
Now we have a disjunction, but the first disjunct is no longer in prenex form.
That can be fixed using DeMorgans law:
x P(x) y Q(y)
Now we can use the Null Quantification Principle to move either of the quan-
tifiers. We chose to move y first, for no particular reason.
y [x P(x) Q(y)]
Finally, we move x
y x (P(x) Q(y))
If we had done it in the other order, we would have obtained the superficially
dierent
x y (P(x) Q(y))
While the order of mixed quantifiers is usually quite important, in this case it
does not matter because of the pattern of variables within the matrix of the
w.
Here is another example:
Again we have a conditional, but this time neither the antecedent nor the
consequent is in prenex normal form. Following the basic strategy of working
from the inside out, lets first put the antecedent and then the consequent
each into prenex form and then worry about what to do about the conditional.
Using the principle of null quantification on the antecedent we obtain
Next we use the principle involving the distribution of and on the conse-
quent:
x (P(x) R(b)) x (P(x) Q(x))
Now both the antecedent and consequent are in prenex form. Recall that its
a good idea to get rid of conditionals in favor of Boolean connectives. Hence,
we replace by its equivalent using and :
Chapter 11
Prenex form / 323
Now we have a disjunction, but one of the disjuncts is not in prenex form.
Again, that can be fixed using DeMorgans law:
x (P(x) R(b)) x (P(x) Q(x))
Now both disjuncts are in prenex form. We need to pull the s out in front. (If
they were both s, we could do this easily, but they arent.) Here is probably
the least obvious step in the process: In order to get ready to pull the s out
in front, we replace the x in the second disjunct by a variable (say z) not in
the first disjunct:
x (P(x) R(b)) z (P(z) Q(z))
We now use the principle of null quantification twice, first on x:
x [(P(x) R(b)) z (P(z) Q(z))]
Finally, we use the same principle on z, giving a w in prenex form:
x z [(P(x) R(b)) (P(z) Q(z))]
It is at this step that things would have gone wrong if we had not first changed
the second x to a z. Do you see why? The wrong quantifiers would have bound
the variables in the second disjunct.
If we wanted to, for some reason, we could now go on and put the inner
part, the part following all the quantifiers, into one of our propositional normal
forms, CNF or DNF.
With these examples behind us, here is a step-by-step transformation of
our original sentence into the one in prenex form given above. We have ab-
breviated the predicates in order to make it easier to read.
x [(C(x) y (T(y) L(x, y))) y (D(y) B(x, y))]
x [(C(x) y (T(y) L(x, y))) y (D(y) B(x, y))]
x [y (C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) y (D(y) B(x, y))]
x [y (C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) y (D(y) B(x, y))]
x [y (C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) z (D(z) B(x, z))]
x y [(C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) z (D(z) B(x, z))]
x y [z (C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) z (D(z) B(x, z))]
x y z [(C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) (D(z) B(x, z))]
x y z [(C(x) T(y) L(x, y)) (D(z) B(x, z))]
Remember
Section 11.7
324 / Multiple Quantifiers
Exercises
Derive the following from the principles given earlier, by replacing by its definition in terms of
and .
11.37 (Putting sentences in Prenex form) Open Jon Russells Sentences. You will find ten sentences,
at the odd numbered positions. Write a prenex form of each sentence in the space below it.
Save your sentences. Open a few worlds, and make sure that your prenex form has the same
truth value as the sentence above it.
11.38 (Some invalid quantifier manipulations) We remarked above on the invalidity of some quantifier
manipulations that are superficially similar to the valid ones. In fact, in both cases one side
is a logical consequence of the other side, but not vice versa. We will illustrate this. Build a
world in which (1) and (3) below are true, but (2) and (4) are false.
1. x [Cube(x) Tet(x)]
2. x Cube(x) x Tet(x)
3. x Cube(x) x Small(x)
4. x [Cube(x) Small(x)]
Section 11.8
Some extra translation problems
Some instructors concentrate more on translation than others. For those who
like to emphasize this skill, we present some additional challenging exercises
here.
Chapter 11
Some extra translation problems / 325
Exercises
11.39 (Translation) Open Peirces World. Look at it in 2-D to remind yourself of the hidden objects.
Start a new sentence file where you will translate the following English sentences. Again, be
sure to check each of your translations to see that it is indeed a true sentence.
1. Everything is either a cube or a tetrahedron.
2. Every cube is to the left of every tetrahedron.
3. There are at least three tetrahedra.
4. Every small cube is in back of a particular large cube.
5. Every tetrahedron is small.
6. Every dodecahedron is smaller than some tetrahedron. [Note: This is vacuously true in
this world.]
Now lets change the world so that none of the English sentences are true. (We can do this by
changing the large cube in front to a dodecahedron, the large cube in back to a tetrahedron,
and deleting the two small tetrahedra in the far right column.) If your answers to 15 are
correct, all of your translations should be false as well. If not, you have made a mistake in
translation. Make further changes, and check to see that the truth values of your translations
track those of the English sentences. Submit your sentence file.
11.40 (More translations for practice) This exercise is just to give you more practice translating
sentences of various sorts. They are all true in Skolems World, in case you want to look while
translating.
Translate the following sentences.
Section 11.8
326 / Multiple Quantifiers
Open Skolems World. Notice that all of the above English sentences are true. Verify that
the same holds of your translations.
This time, rather than open other worlds, make changes to Skolems World and see
that the truth value of your translations track that of the English sentence. For ex-
ample, consider sentence 5. Add a small dodecahedron between the front two cubes.
The English sentence is still true. Is your translation? Now move the dodecahedron
over between two tetrahedra. The English sentence is false. Is your translation? Now
make the dodecahedron medium. The English sentence is again true. How about your
translation?
11.41 Using the symbols introduced in Table 1.2, page 30, translate the following into fol. Do
not introduce any additional names or predicates. Comment on any shortcomings in your
translations.
1. No student owned two pets at a time.
2. No student owned two pets until Claire did.
3. Anyone who owns a pet feeds it sometime.
4. Anyone who owns a pet feeds it sometime while they own it.
5. Only pets that are hungry are fed.
11.42 Translate the following into fol. As usual, explain the meanings of the names, predicates, and
. function symbols you use, and comment on any shortcomings in your translations.
1. You should always except the present company.
2. There was a jolly miller once
Lived on the River Dee;
He worked and sang from morn till night
No lark more blithe than he.
3. Man is the only animal that blushes. Or needs to.
4. You can fool all of the people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time,
but you cant fool all of the people all of the time.
5. Everybody loves a lover.
11.43 Give two translations of each of the following and discuss which is the most plausible reading,
. and why.
1. Every senior in the class likes his or her computer, and so does the professor. [Treat
the professor as a name here and in the next sentence.]
2. Every senior in the class likes his or her advisor, and so does the professor.
3. In some countries, every student must take an exam before going to college.
4. In some countries, every student learns a foreign language before going to college.
Chapter 11
Some extra translation problems / 327
11.44 (Using DeMorgans Laws in mathematics) The DeMorgan Laws for quantifiers are quite helpful
. in mathematics. A function f on real numbers is said to be continuous at 0 if, intuitively, f (x)
can be kept close to f (0) by keeping x close enough to 0. If you have had calculus then you
will probably recognize the following a way to make this definition precise:
Here > 0(. . .) is shorthand for ( > 0 . . .). Similarly, > 0(. . .) is shorthand
for ( > 0 . . .). Use DeMorgans Laws to express the claim that f is not continuous at 0
in prenex form. You may use the same kind of shorthand we have used. Turn in your solution.
The natural translations of these turn out to have forms that are equivalent, according to the
equivalence in Problem 11.33. But clearly the English sentences do not mean the same thing.
Explain what is going on here. Are the natural translations really correct?
Section 11.8
Chapter 12
Section 12.1
Valid quantifier steps
There are two very simple valid quantifier steps, one for each quantifier. They
work in opposite directions, however.
Universal elimination
Suppose we are given as a premise (or have otherwise established) that ev-
erything in the domain of discourse is either a cube or a tetrahedron. And
suppose we also know that c is in the domain of discourse. It follows, of course,
that c is either a cube or a tetrahedron, since everything is.
More generally, suppose we have established x S(x), and we know that c
names an object in the domain of discourse. We may legitimately infer S(c).
328
Valid quantifier steps / 329
After all, there is no way the universal claim could be true without the specific
claim also being true. This inference step is called universal instantiation or universal elimination
universal elimination. Notice that it allows you to move from a known result (instantiation)
that begins with a quantifier x (. . . x . . .) to one (. . . c . . .) where the quantifier
has been eliminated.
Existential introduction
There is also a simple proof step for , but it allows you to introduce the
quantifier. Suppose you have established that c is a small tetrahedron. It
follows, of course, that there is a small tetrahedron. There is no way for the
specific claim about c to be true without the existential claim also being
true. More generally, if we have established a claim of the form S(c) then we
may infer x S(x). This step is called existential generalization or existential existential introduction
introduction. (generalization)
In mathematical proofs, the preferred way to demonstrate the truth of
an existential claim is to find (or construct) a specific instance that satisfies
the requirement, and then apply existential generalization. For example, if
we wanted to prove that there are natural numbers x, y, and z for which
x2 + y 2 = z 2 , we could simply note that 32 + 42 = 52 and apply existential
generalization (thrice over).
The validity of both of these inference steps is not unconditional in English. presuppositions
They are valid as long as any name used denotes some object in the domain of these rules
of discourse. This holds for fol by convention, as we have already stressed,
but English is a bit more subtle here. Consider, for example, the name Santa.
The sentence
Santa does not exist
might be true in circumstances where one would be reluctant to conclude
There is something that does not exist.
The trouble, of course, is that the name Santa does not denote anything. So
we have to be careful applying this rule in ordinary arguments where there
might be names in use that do not refer to actually existing objects.
Lets give an informal proof that uses both steps, as well as some other
things we have learned. We will show that the following argument is valid:
x [Cube(x) Large(x)]
x [Large(x) LeftOf(x, b)]
Cube(d)
x [Large(x) LeftOf(x, b)]
Section 12.1
330 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
This is a rather obvious result, which is all the better for illustrating the
obviousness of these steps.
Cube(d) Large(d)
and
Large(d) LeftOf(d, b)
Large(d) LeftOf(d, b)
Before leaving this section, we should point out that there are ways to prove
existential statements other than by existential generalization. In particular,
to prove x P(x) we could use proof by contradiction, assuming x P(x) and
deriving a contradiction. This method of proceeding is somewhat less satis-
fying, since it does not actually tell you which object it is that satisfies the
condition P(x). Still, it does show that there is some such object, which is all
that is claimed. This was in fact the method we used back on page 132 to
prove that there are irrational numbers x and y such that xy is rational.
Remember
Chapter 12
The method of existential instantiation / 331
Section 12.2
The method of existential instantiation
Section 12.2
332 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
x [Cube(x) Large(x)]
x [Large(x) LeftOf(x, b)]
x Cube(x)
x [Large(x) LeftOf(x, b)]
The first two premises are the same but the third is weaker, since it does not
tell us which block is a cube, only that there is one. We would like to eliminate
the in our third premise, since then we would be back to the case we have
already examined. How then should we proceed? The proof would take the
following form:
Proof: We first note that the third premise assures us that there is at
least one cube. Let e name one of these cubes. We can now proceed
just as in our earlier reasoning. Applying the first premise, we see
that e must be large. (What steps are we using here?) Applying
the second premise, we see that e must also be left of b. Thus, we
have shown that e is both large and left of b. Our desired conclusion
follows (by what inference step?) from this claim.
an important condition In applying existential instantiation, it is very important to make sure you
use a new name, not one that is already in use or that appears in the conclusion
you wish to prove. Looking at the above example shows why. Suppose we had
thoughtlessly used the name b for the cube e. Then we would have been
able to prove x LeftOf(x, x), which is impossible. But our original premises
are obviously satisfiable: they are true in many dierent worlds. So if we do
not observe this condition, we can be led from true premises to false (even
impossible) conclusions.
Section 12.3
The method of general conditional proof
Chapter 12
The method of general conditional proof / 333
Finally, let us suppose we are able to prove from these premises that Sandy,
a math major, is smart. Under what conditions would we be entitled to infer
that every math major at the school is smart?
At first sight, it seems that we could never draw such a conclusion, unless
there were only one math major at the school. After all, it does not follow
from the fact that one math major is smart that all math majors are. But
what if our proof that Sandy is smart uses nothing at all that is particular to
Sandy? What if the proof would apply equally well to any math major? Then
it seems that we should be able to conclude that every math major is smart.
How might one use this in a real example? Let us suppose that our argu-
ment took the following form:
Section 12.3
334 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
Universal generalization
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x Cube(x)
x Small(x)
Chapter 12
The method of general conditional proof / 335
In fact, it was the first example we looked at back in Chapter 10. Lets give a
proof of this argument.
Proof: We begin by taking a new name d, and think of it as stand-
ing for any member of the domain of discourse. Applying universal
instantiation twice, once to each premise, gives us
1. Cube(d) Small(d)
2. Cube(d)
By modus ponens, we conclude Small(d). But d denotes an arbitrary
object in the domain, so our conclusion, x Small(x), follows by uni-
versal generalization.
Any proof using general conditional proof can be converted into a proof universal generalization
using universal generalization, together with the method of conditional proof. and general conditional
Suppose we have managed to prove x [P(x) Q(x)] using general conditional proof
proof. Here is how we would go about proving it with universal generalization
instead. First we would introduce a new name c, and think of it as standing
for an arbitrary member of the domain of discourse. We know we can then
prove P(c) Q(c) using ordinary conditional proof, since that is what we did
in our original proof. But then, since c stands for an arbitrary member of the
domain, we can use universal generalization to get x [P(x) Q(x)].
This is how formal systems of deduction can get by without having an
explicit rule of general conditional proof. One could in a sense think of uni-
versal generalization as a special case of general conditional proof. After all,
if we wanted to prove x S(x) we could apply general conditional proof to
the logically equivalent sentence x [x = x S(x)]. Or, if our language has the
predicate Thing(x) that holds of everything in the domain of discourse, we
could use general conditional proof to obtain x [Thing(x) S(x)]. But since
general conditional proof may not allow us to prove x S(x) alone, universal
generalization is, well, more general.1 (The relation between general condi-
tional proof and universal generalization will become clearer when we get to
the topic of generalized quantifiers in Section 14.4.)
We have chosen to emphasize general conditional proof since it is the
method most often used in giving rigorous informal proofs. The division of this
method into conditional proof and universal generalization is a clever trick,
but it does not correspond well to actual reasoning. This is at least in part
due to the fact that universal noun phrases of English are always restricted by
some common noun, if only the noun thing. The natural counterparts of such
statements in fol have the form x [P(x) Q(x)], which is why we typically
prove them by general conditional proof.
1 We would like to thank S. Marc Cohen for his observations on the relationship between
Section 12.3
336 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
2. x Cube(x)
x Small(x)
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
We saw there that the truth functional rules did not suce to establish these
arguments. In this chapter we have seen (on page 335) how to establish the
first using valid methods that apply to the quantifiers. Lets conclude this
discussion by giving an informal proof of the second.
Proof: Let d be any object in the domain of discourse. By the first
premise, we obtain (by universal elimination) Cube(d). By the second
premise, we obtain Small(d). Hence we have (Cube(d) Small(d)).
But since d is an arbitrary object in the domain, we can conclude
x (Cube(x) Small(x)), by universal generalization.
Exercises
The following exercises each contain a formal argument and something that purports to be an informal
proof of it. Some of these proofs are correct while others are not. Give a logical critique of the purported
proof. Your critique should take the form of a short essay that makes explicit each proof step or method
of proof used, indicating whether it is valid or not. If there is a mistake, see if can you patch it up by
giving a correct proof of the conclusion from the premises. If the argument in question is valid, you
should be able to fix up the proof. If the argument is invalid, then of course you will not be able to fix
the proof.
Chapter 12
The method of general conditional proof / 337
We prove these by the method of general conditional proof, in turn. To prove (1), let
b be anything that is brillig. Then by the first premise it is both mimsy and slithy.
Hence it is mimsy, as desired. Thus we have established (1).
To prove (2), let b be anything that is mimsy. By the second premise, b is also tove.
But then by the final premise, b is brillig, as desired. This concludes the proof.
The following exercises each contains an argument; some are valid, some not. If the argument is valid,
give an informal proof. If it is not valid, use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample.
Section 12.3
338 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
Section 12.4
Proofs involving mixed quantifiers
There are no new methods of proof that apply specifically to sentences with
mixed quantifiers, but the introduction of mixed quantifiers forces us to be
more explicit about some subtleties having to do with the interaction of meth-
ods that introduce new names into a proof: existential instantiation, general
conditional proof, and universal generalization. It turns out that problems can
arise from the interaction of these methods of proof.
Let us begin by illustrating the problem. Consider the following argument:
Chapter 12
Proofs involving mixed quantifiers / 339
This is obviously invalid. The fact that every boy likes some girl or other
doesnt imply that some girl is liked by every boy. So we cant really prove
that the conclusion follows from the premise. But the following pseudo-proof
might appear to do just that.
Pseudo-proof: Assume the premise, that is, that every boy likes
some girl or other. Let e be any boy in the domain. By our premise,
e likes some girl. Let us introduce the new name f for some girl
that e likes. Since the boy e was chosen arbitrarily, we conclude
that every boy likes f , by general conditional proof. But then, by
existential generalization, we have the desired result, namely, that
some girl is liked by every boy.
This reasoning is fallacious. Seeing why it is fallacious is extremely impor-
tant, if we are to avoid missteps in reasoning. The problem centers on our
conclusion that every boy likes f . Recall how the name f came into the hidden dependencies
proof. We knew that e, being one of the boys, liked some girl, and we chose
one of those girls and dubbed her with the name f . This choice of a girl
depends crucially on which boy e we are talking about. If e was Matt or Alex,
we could have picked Zoe and dubbed her f . But if e was Eric, we couldnt
pick Zoe. Eric likes one of the girls, but certainly not Zoe.
The problem is this. Recall that in order to conclude a universal claim
based on reasoning about a single individual, it is imperative that we not
appeal to anything specific about that individual. But after we give the name
f to one of the girls that e likes, any conclusion we come to about e and
f may well violate this imperative. We cant be positive that it would apply
equally to all the boys.
Stepping back from this particular example, the upshot is this. Suppose
we assume P(c), where c is a new name, and prove Q(c). We cannot conclude
x [P(x) Q(x)] if Q(c) mentions a specific individual whose choice depended
on the individual denoted by c. In practice, the best way to insure that no
such individual is specifically mentioned is to insist that Q(c) not contain any
name that was introduced by existential instantiation under the assumption
that P(c).
Section 12.4
340 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
Alex Zoe
Eric Rachel
Matt Laura
Brad Betsy
Tom Sarah
Can you spot the fallacious step in this proof? The problem is that we
generalized from Adjoins(c, d) to x Adjoins(x, d). But the constant d was in-
troduced by existential instantiation (though we did not say so explicitly) after
the constant c was introduced. Hence, the choice of the object d depends on
which object c we are talking about. The subsequent universal generalization
is just what our restriction rules out.
Let us now give a summary statement of the main methods of proof in-
volving the first-order quantifiers.
Chapter 12
Proofs involving mixed quantifiers / 341
Remember
Euclids Theorem
Recall that a prime number is a whole number greater than 1 that is not
divisible by any whole numbers other than 1 and itself. The first ten primes
are 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23 and 29. The prime numbers become increasingly
scarce as the numbers get larger. The question arises as to whether there is
a largest one, or whether the primes go on forever. Euclids Theorem is the Euclids Theorem
statement that they go on forever, that there is no largest prime. In fol, we
might put it this way:
x y [y x Prime(y)]
Section 12.4
342 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
Notice the order of the last two steps. Had we violated the new condi-
tion on the application of general conditional proof to conclude that p is a
prime number greater than or equal to every natural number, we would have
obtained a patently false result.
Twin Prime Conjecture Here, by the way, is a closely related conjecture, called the Twin Prime
Conjecture. No one knows whether it is true or not.
There was once a small town in Indiana where there was a barber who shaved
all and only the men of the town who did not shave themselves. We might
formalize this in fol as follows:
Now there does not on the face of it seem to be anything logically inco-
herent about the existence of such a town. But here is a proof that there can
be no such town.
Chapter 12
Proofs involving mixed quantifiers / 343
There are many variations on this example that you can use to amaze,
amuse, or annoy your family with when you go home for the holidays. We
give a couple examples in the exercises (see Exercises 12.13 and 12.28).
Exercises
These exercises each contain a purported proof. If it is correct, say so. If it is incorrect, explain what
goes wrong using the notions presented above.
12.11
.
There is a number greater than every other number.
Purported proof: Let n be an arbitrary number. Then n is less than some other
number, n + 1 for example. Let m be any such number. Thus n m. But n is an
arbitrary number, so every number is less or equal m. Hence there is a number that
is greater than every other number.
Section 12.4
344 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
y GivesTo(b, y, c)
But this follows directly from our premise, since there is something that b gives to
everyone.
12.14
.
There is at most one object.
Purported proof: Toward a proof by contradiction, suppose that there is more than
one object in the domain of discourse. Let c be any one of these objects. Then there is
some other object d, so that d = c. But since c was arbitrary, x (d = x). But then, by
universal instantiation, d = d. But d = d, so we have our contradiction. Hence there
can be at most one object in the domain of discourse.
Chapter 12
Proofs involving mixed quantifiers / 345
The next three exercises contain arguments from a single set of premises. In each case decide whether
or not the argument is valid. If it is, give an informal proof. If it isnt, use Tarskis World to construct
a counterexample.
The next three exercises contain arguments from a single set of premises. In each, decide whether the
argument is valid. If it is, give an informal proof. If it isnt valid, use Tarskis World to build a coun-
terexample.
Section 12.4
346 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
12.23 Translate the following argument into fol and determine whether or not the conclusion follows
. from the premises. If it does, give a proof.
Every child is either right-handed or intelligent.
No intelligent child eats liver.
There is a child who eats liver and onions.
There is a right-handed child who eats onions.
In the next three exercises, we work in the first-order language of arithmetic with the added predicates
Even(x), Prime(x), and DivisibleBy(x, y), where these have the obvious meanings (the last means that the
natural number y divides the number x without remainder.) Prove the result stated in the exercise. In
some cases, you have already done all the hard work in earlier problems.
12.27 Are sentences (1) and (2) in Exercise 9.19 on page 252 logically equivalent? If so, give a proof.
. If not, explain why not.
12.28 Show that it would be impossible to construct a reference book that lists all and only those
. reference books that do not list themselves.
Chapter 12
Axiomatizing shape / 347
12.29 Call a natural number a near prime if its prime factorization contains at most two distinct
. primes. The first number which is not a near prime is 2 3 5 = 30. Prove
x y [y > x NearPrime(y)]
You may appeal to our earlier result that there is no largest prime.
Section 12.5
Axiomatizing shape
Lets return to the project of giving axioms for the shape properties in Tarskis
World. In Section 10.5, we gave axioms that described basic facts about the
three shapes, but we stopped short of giving axioms for the binary relation
SameShape. The reason we stopped was that the needed axioms require mul-
tiple quantifiers, which we had not covered at the time.
How do we choose which sentences to take as axioms? The main consid-
eration is correctness: the axioms must be true in all relevant circumstances, correctness of axioms
either in virtue of the meanings of the predicates involved, or because we have
restricted our attention to a specific type of circumstance.
The two possibilities are reflected in our first four axioms about shape,
which we repeat here for ease of reference:
Basic Shape Axioms:
1. x (Cube(x) Tet(x))
2. x (Tet(x) Dodec(x))
3. x (Dodec(x) Cube(x))
Section 12.5
348 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
This argument is clearly valid, in the sense that in any world in which the
premise is true, the conclusion will be true as well. But the conclusion is
certainly not a first-order consequence of the premise. (Why?) If we treat
the four basic shape axioms as additional premises, though, we can prove the
conclusion using just the first-order methods of proof available to us.
While our four axioms are complete if we restrict attention to the three
shape predicates, they are clearly not complete when we consider sentences
involving SameShape. If we were to give inference rules for this predicate, it
would be natural to state them in the form of introduction and elimination
rules: the former specifying when we can conclude that two blocks are the
same shape; the latter specifying what we can infer from such a fact. This
suggests the following axioms:
Chapter 12
Axiomatizing shape / 349
During the course of this book, we have proven many claims about natural
numbers, and asked you to prove some as well. You may have noticed that
these proofs did not appeal to explicit premises. Rather, the proofs freely cited
any obvious facts about the natural numbers. However, we could (and will)
make the needed assumptions explicit by means of the axiomatic method.
In Section 16.4, we will discuss the standard Peano axioms that are used to Peano axioms
axiomatize the obvious truths of arithmetic. While we will not do so, it would
be possible to take each of our proofs about natural numbers and turn it into
a proof that used only these Peano Axioms as premises.
We will later show, however, that the Peano Axioms are not complete, and
that it is in fact impossible to present first-order axioms that are complete for G
odels Incompleteness
arithmetic. This is the famous Godel Incompleteness Theorem and is discussed Theorem
in the final section of this book.
Section 12.5
350 / Methods of Proof for Quantifiers
Exercises
Give informal proofs of the following arguments, if they are valid, making use of any of the ten shape
axioms as needed, so that your proof uses only first-order methods of proof. Be very explicit about which
axioms you are using at various steps. If the argument is not valid, use Tarskis World to provide a
counterexample.
12.36 The last six shape axioms are quite intuitive and easy to remember, but we could have gotten
. by with fewer. In fact, there is a single sentence that completely captures the meaning of
SameShape, given the first four axioms. This is the sentence that says that two things are the
same shape if and only if they are both cubes, both tetrahedra, or both dodecahedra:
x y (SameShape(x, y) ((Cube(x) Cube(y))
(Tet(x) Tet(y))
(Dodec(x) Dodec(y)))
Use this axiom and and the basic shape axioms (1)-(4) to give informal proofs of axioms (5)
and (8).
12.37 Let us imagine adding as new atomic sentences involving a binary predicate MoreSides. We
. assume that MoreSides(b, c) holds if block b has more sides than block c. See if you can come
up with axioms that completely capture the meaning of this predicate. The natural way to do
this involves two or three introduction axioms and three or four elimination axioms. Turn in
your axioms to your instructor.
12.38 Find first-order axioms for the six size predicates of the blocks language. [Hint: use the axiom-
. atization of shape to guide you.]
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Now that we have learned the basic informal methods of proof for quantifiers,
we turn to the task of giving formal rules that correspond to them. Again, we
can to do this by having two rules for each quantifier.
Before getting down to the rules, though, we should emphasize that formal
proofs in the system F contain only sentences, never ws with free variables.
This is because we want every line of a proof to make a definite claim. Ws
with free variables do not make claims, as we have noted. Some deductive
systems do allow proofs containing formulas with free variables, where such
variables are interpreted universally, but that is not how the system F works.
Section 13.1
Universal quantifier rules
x S(x)
..
.
S(c)
Here x stands for any variable, c stands for any individual constant (whether
or not it has been used elsewhere in the proof), and S(c) stands for the result
of replacing free occurrences of x in S(x) with c. If the language contains
function symbols, c can also be any complex term that contains no variables.
Next, let us formalize the more interesting methods of general conditional
proof and universal generalization. This requires that we decide how to rep-
resent the fact that a constant symbol, say c, has been introduced to stand
for an arbitrary object satisfying some condition, say P(c). We indicate this
by means of a subproof with assumption P(c), insisting that the constant c in
question occur only within that subproof. This will guarantee, for example,
that the constant does not appear in the premises of the overall proof.
351
352 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
c P(c)
When we give the justification for universal introduction, we will cite the
subproof, as we do in the case of conditional introduction. The requirement
that c not occur outside the subproof in which it is introduced does not pre-
clude it occurring within subproofs of that subproof. A sentence in a subproof
of a subproof still counts as a sentence of the larger subproof.
As a special case of Intro we allow a subproof where there is no sentential
assumption at all, just the boxed constant on its own. This corresponds to
the method of universal generalization discussed earlier, where one assumes
that the constant in question stands for an arbitrary object in the domain of
discourse.
Chapter 13
Universal quantifier rules / 353
Lets illustrate how to use these rules by giving a formal proof mirroring
the informal proof given on page 335. We prove that the following argument
is valid:
x (P(x) Q(x))
z (Q(z) R(z))
x (P(x) R(x))
(This is a general form of the argument about all math majors being smart
given earlier.) Here is a completed proof:
1. x (P(x) Q(x))
2. z (Q(z) R(z))
3. d P(d)
Notice that the constant symbol d does not appear outside the subproof. It is
newly introduced at the beginning of that subproof, and occurs nowhere else
outside it. That is what allows the introduction of the universal quantifier in
the final step.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Universal 1. This file contains the argument proven above.
Well show you how to construct this proof in Fitch.
2. Start a new subproof immediately after the premises. Before typing any-
thing in, notice that there is a blue, downward pointing triangle to the left
of the blinking cursor. It looks just like the focus slider, but sort of stand-
ing on its head. Use your mouse to click down on this triangle. A menu
will pop up, allowing you to choose the constant(s) you want boxed in
this subproof. Choose d from the menu. (If you choose the wrong one, say
c, then choose it again to unbox it.)
3. After you have d in the constant box, enter the sentence P(d) as your
assumption. Then add a step and continue the subproof.
Section 13.1
354 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
4. You should now be able to complete the proof on your own. When youre
done, save it as Proof Universal 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
default uses of rules Both of the universal quantifier rules have default uses. If you cite a universal
sentence and apply Elim without entering a sentence, Fitch will replace the
universally quantified variable with its best guess of the name you intended. It
will either choose the alphabetically first name that does not already appear
in the sentence, or the first name that appears as a boxed constant in the
current subproof. For example, in steps 4 and 6 of the above proof, the default
mechanism would choose d, and so generate the correct instances.
If you know you want a dierent name substituted for the universally
indicating substitutions quantified variable, you can indicate this by typing a colon (:), followed by
the variable, followed by the greater-than sign (>), followed by the name
you want. In other words, if instead of a sentence you enter : x > c, Fitch
will instantiate x P(x) as P(c), rather than picking its own default instance.
(Think of : x > c as saying substitute c for x.)
If you apply Intro to a subproof that starts with a boxed constant on its
own, without entering a sentence, Fitch will take the last sentence in the cited
subproof and universally quantify the name introduced at the beginning of the
subproof. If the cited subproof starts with a boxed constant and a sentence,
then Fitch will write the corresponding universal conditional, using the first
sentence and the last sentence of the proof to create the conditional.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Universal 2. Look at the goal to see what sentence we are
trying to prove. Then focus on each step in succession and check the step.
Before moving to the next step, make sure you understand why the step
checks out and, more important, why we are doing what we are doing at
that step. At the empty steps, try to predict which sentence Fitch will
provide as a default before you check the step.
2. When you are done, make sure you understand the completed proof. Save
the file as Proof Universal 2.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Chapter 13
Universal quantifier rules / 355
Fitch has generous uses of both rules. Elim will allow you to remove
several universal quantifiers from the front a sentence simultaneously. For
example, if you have proven x y SameCol(x, y) you could infer SameCol(f, c)
in one step in Fitch. If you want to use the default mechanism to generate this
step, you can enter the substitutions : x > f : y > c before checking the step.
In a like manner, you can often prove a sentence starting with more than
one universal quantifier by means of a single application of Intro. You do
this by starting a subproof with the appropriate number of boxed constants.
If you then prove a sentence containing these constants you may end the
subproof and infer the result of universally quantifying each of these constants
using Intro. The default mechanism allows you to specify the variables to
be used in the generated sentence by indicating the desired substitutions, for
example : a > z : b > w will generate z w R(w, z) when applied to R(b, a).
Notice the order used to specify substitutions: for Elim it will always be
: variable > name, while for Intro it must be : name > variable.
Add Support Steps can be used with the Intro rule. If the focus step
contains a universally quantified formula then the support will be a subproof
with a new constant at the assumption step. The last step of the subproof will
contain the appropriate instance of the universal formula. With the Elim
rule a single support step containing a universal formula will be added. The
support formula will be a universal generalization of the formula at the focus
step, with the first constant replaced by the variable of quantification.
Remember
Exercises
13.1 If you skipped the You try it sections, go back and do them now. Submit the files Proof
Universal 1 and Proof Universal 2.
For each of the following arguments, decide whether or not it is valid. If it is, use Fitch to give a formal
proof. If it isnt, use Tarskis World to give a counterexample. In this chapter you are free to use Taut
Con to justify proof steps involving only propositional connectives.
Section 13.1
356 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
Section 13.2
Existential quantifier rules
Chapter 13
Existential quantifier rules / 357
S(c)
..
.
x S(x)
Here too x stands for any variable, c stands for any individual constant (or
complex term without variables), and S(c) stands for the result of replacing
free occurrences of x in S(x) with c. Note that there may be other occurrences
of c in S(x) as well.
When we turn to the rule of existential elimination, we employ the same,
boxed constant device as with universal introduction. If we have proven
x S(x), then we introduce a new constant symbol, say c, along with the as-
sumption that the object denoted by c satisfies the formula S(x). If, from this
assumption, we can derive some sentence Q not containing the constant c,
then we can conclude that Q follows from the original premises.
x S(x)
..
.
c S(c)
Again we think of the notation at the beginning of the subproof as the formal
counterpart of the English Let c be an arbitrary individual such that S(c).
The rule of existential elimination is quite analogous to the rule of disjunc-
tion elimination, both formally and intuitively. With disjunction elimination, comparison with
we have a disjunction and break into cases, one for each disjunct, and estab- Elim
lish the same result in each case. With existential elimination, we can think
of having one case for each object in the domain of discourse. We are required
to show that, whichever object it is that satisfies the condition S(x), the same
result Q can be obtained. If we can do this, we may conclude Q.
To illustrate the two existential rules, we will give a formal counterpart to
the proof given on page 332.
Section 13.2
358 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
1. x [Cube(x) Large(x)]
2. x [Large(x) LeftOf(x, b)]
3. x Cube(x)
4. e Cube(e)
Defaults for the existential quantifier rules work similarly to those for the
default uses of rules universal quantifier. If you cite a sentence and apply Intro without typing
a sentence, Fitch will supply a sentence that existentially quantifies the al-
phabetically first name appearing in the cited sentence. When replacing the
name with a variable, Fitch will choose the first variable in the list of variables
that does not already appear in the cited sentence. If this isnt the name or
variable you want used, you can specify the substitution yourself; for example
: max > z will replace max with z and add z to the front of the result.
In a default application of Elim, Fitch will supply the last sentence in
the cited subproof, providing that sentence does not contain the temporary
name introduced at the beginning of the subproof.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the file Existential 1. Look at the goal to see the sentence we are
trying to prove. Then focus on each step in succession and check the step.
Before moving to the next step, make sure you understand why the step
checks out and, more important, why we are doing what we are doing at
that step.
2. At any empty steps, you should try to predict which sentence Fitch will
provide as a default before you check the step. Notice in particular step
eight, the one that contains : a > y. Can you guess what sentence would
Chapter 13
Existential quantifier rules / 359
have been supplied by Fitch had we not specified this substitution? You
could try it if you like.
3. When you are done, make sure you understand the completed proof. Save
the file as Proof Existential 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
As with , Fitch has generous uses of both rules. Intro will allow
you to add several existential quantifiers to the front a sentence. For example,
if you have proved SameCol(b, a) you could infer y z SameCol(y, z) in one
step in Fitch. In a like manner, you can use a sentence beginning with more
than one existential quantifier in a single application of Elim. You do this
by starting a subproof with the appropriate number of boxed constants. If
you then prove a sentence not containing these constants, you may end the
subproof and infer the result using Elim.
The Add Support Steps command cannot be used with either of the
rules.
Remember
Exercises
13.10 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Existential 1.
For each of the following arguments, decide whether or not it is valid. If it is, use Fitch to give a formal
proof. If it isnt, use Tarskis World to give a counterexample. Remember that in this chapter you are
free to use Taut Con to justify proof steps involving only propositional connectives.
Section 13.2
360 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
In our discussion of the informal methods, we observed that the method that introduces new constants
can interact to give defective proofs, if not used with care. The formal system F automatically prevents
these misapplications of the quantifier rules. The next two exercises are designed to show you how the
formal rules prevent these invalid steps by formalizing one of the fallacious informal proofs we gave
earlier.
1. x y SameCol(x, y)
2. c
3. y SameCol(c, y) Elim: 1
4. d SameCol(c, d)
5. SameCol(c, d) Reit: 4
6. SameCol(c, d) Elim: 3, 45
7. x SameCol(x, d) Intro: 26
8. y x SameCol(x, y) Intro: 7
1. Write this proof in a file using Fitch and check it out. You will discover that step
6 is incorrect; it violates the restriction on existential elimination that requires the
constant d to appear only in the subproof where it is introduced. Notice that the other
steps all check out, so if we could make that move, then the rest of the proof would be
fine.
2. Construct a counterexample to the argument to show that no proof is possible.
13.18 Lets contrast the faulty proof from the preceding exercise with a genuine proof
that x y R(x, y) follows from y x R(x, y). Use Fitch to create the following proof.
Chapter 13
Strategy and tactics / 361
1. y x SameCol(x, y)
2. d x SameCol(x, d)
3. c
4. SameCol(c, d) Elim: 2
5. y SameCol(c, y) Intro: 4
6. x y SameCol(x, y) Intro: 35
7. x y SameCol(x, y) Elim: 1, 26
Notice that in this proof, unlike the one in the previous exercise, both constant symbols c
and d are properly sequestered within the subproofs where they are introduced. Therefore the
quantifier rules have been applied properly. Submit your proof.
Section 13.3
Strategy and tactics
We have seen some rather simple examples of proofs using the new rules. In
more interesting examples, however, the job of finding a proof can get pretty
challenging. So a few words on how to approach these proofs will be helpful.
We have given you a general maxim and two strategies for finding sen-
tential proofs. The maximto consider what the various sentences meanis consider meaning
even more important with the quantifiers. Only if you remember what they
mean and how the formal methods mirror common-sense informal methods
will you be able to do any but the most boring of exercises.
Our first strategy was to try to come up with an informal proof of the informal proof as guide
goal sentence from the premises, and use it to try to figure out how your
formal proof will proceed. This strategy, too, is even more important in proofs
involving quantifiers, but it is a bit harder to apply. The key skill in applying
the strategy is the ability to identify the formal rules implicit in your informal
reasoning. This takes a bit of practice. Lets work through an example, to see
some of the things you should be looking out for.
Suppose we want to prove that the following argument is valid:
x (Tet(x) Small(x))
x (Small(x) LeftOf(x, b))
x LeftOf(x, b)
Section 13.3
362 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
Obviously, the conclusion follows from the given sentences. But ask yourself
how you would prove it, say, to your stubborn roommate, the one who likes
to play devils advocate. You might argue as follows:
Now we dont recommend calling your roommate Bozo, so ignore that bit.
The important thing to notice here is the implicit use of three of our quantifier
rules: Elim, Elim, and Intro. Do you see them?
What indicates the use of Elim is the it appearing in the second
sentence. What we are doing there is introducing a temporary name (in this
case, the pronoun it) and using it to refer to a small tetrahedron. That
corresponds to starting the subproof needed for an application of Elim.
So after the second sentence of our informal proof, we can already see the
following steps in our reasoning (using c for it):
1. x (Tet(x) Small(x))
2. x (Small(x) LeftOf(x, b))
3. c Tet(c) Small(c)
4. Small(c) Elim: 3
..
.
5. x LeftOf(x, b) ??
In general, the key to recognizing Elim is to watch out for any reference to
an object whose existence is guaranteed by an existential claim. The reference
might use a pronoun (it, he, she), as in our example, or it might use a definite
noun phrase (the small tetrahedron), or finally it might use an actual name
(let n be a small tetrahedron). Any of these are signs that the reasoning is
proceeding via existential elimination.
The third and fourth sentences of our informal argument are where the
implicit use of Elim shows up. There we apply the claim about all small
things to the small tetrahedron we are calling it. This gives us a couple
more steps in our formal proof:
Chapter 13
Strategy and tactics / 363
1. x (Tet(x) Small(x))
2. x (Small(x) LeftOf(x, b))
3. c Tet(c) Small(c)
4. Small(c) Elim: 3
5. Small(c) LeftOf(c, b) Elim: 2
6. LeftOf(c, b) Elim: 4, 5
..
.
8. x LeftOf(x, b) ?
1. x (Tet(x) Small(x))
2. x (Small(x) LeftOf(x, b))
3. c Tet(c) Small(c)
4. Small(c) Elim: 3
5. Small(c) LeftOf(c, b) Elim: 2
6. LeftOf(c, b) Elim: 4, 5
7. x LeftOf(x, b) Intro: 6
One thing thats a bit tricky is that in informal reasoning we often leave out
simple steps like Intro, since they are so obvious. Thus in our example, we
might have left out the last sentence completely. After all, once we conclude
that the small tetrahedron is left of b, it hardly seems necessary to point out
that something is left of b. So youve got to watch out for these omitted steps.
Section 13.3
364 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
This completes our formal proof. To a trained eye, the proof matches the
informal reasoning exactly. But you shouldnt feel discouraged if you would
have missed it on your own. It takes a lot of practice to recognize the steps
implicit in our own reasoning, but it is practice that in the end makes us more
careful and able reasoners.
working backward The second strategy that we stressed is that of working backwards: starting
from the goal sentence and inserting steps or subproofs that would enable us
to infer that goal. It turns out that of the four new quantifier rules, only
Intro really lends itself to this technique.
Suppose your goal sentence is of the form x (P(x) Q(x)). After survey-
ing your given sentences to see whether there is any immediate way to infer
this conclusion, it is almost always a good idea to start a subproof in which
you introduce an arbitrary name, say c, and assume P(c). Then add a step to
the subproof and enter the sentence Q(c), leaving the rule unspecified. Next,
end the subproof and inferx (P(x) Q(x)) by Intro, citing the subproof
in support. When you check this partial proof, an X will appear next to the
sentence Q(c), indicating that your new goal is to prove this sentence.
Remember
1. Always be clear about the meaning of the sentences you are using.
A worked example
We are going to work through a moderately dicult proof, step by step, using
what we have learned in this section. Consider the the following argument:
x P(x)
x P(x)
Chapter 13
Strategy and tactics / 365
This is one of four such inferences associated with the DeMorgan rules relating
quantifiers and negation. The fact that this inference can be validated in F
is one we will need in our proof of the Completeness Theorem for the system
F in the final chapter. (The other three DeMorgan rules will be given in the
review exercises at the end of this chapter. Understanding this example will
be a big help in doing those exercises.)
Before embarking on the proof, we mention that this inference is one of the
hallmarks of first-order logic. Notice that it allows us to assert the existence
of something having a property from a negative fact: that not everything has
the opposite property.
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the validity of this sort
of inference was hotly debated in mathematical circles. While it seems obvious
to us now, it is because we have come to understand existence claims in a
somewhat dierent way than some (the so-called intuitionists) understood intuitionists
them. While the first-order understanding of x Q(x) is as asserting that some
Q exists, the intuitionist took it as asserting something far stronger: that the
asserter had actually found a Q and proven it to be a Q. Under this stronger
reading, the DeMorgan principle under discussion would not be valid. This
point will be relevant to our proof.
Let us now turn to the proof. Following our strategy, we begin with an
informal proof, and then formalize it.
This leaves only one possible route to our desired conclusion: proof
by contradiction. Thus we will negate our desired conclusion and try
to obtain a contradiction. Thus, we assume x P(x). How can we
hope to obtain a contradiction? Since our only premise is x P(x),
the most promising line of attack would be to try for a proof of
x P(x) using universal generalization. Thus, let c be an arbitrary
individual in our domain of discourse. Our goal is to prove P(c).
How can we do this? Another proof by contradiction, for if P(c)
were not the case, then we would have P(c), and hence x P(x).
But this contradicts our assumption. Hence P(c) is the case. Since
Section 13.3
366 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
You try it
................................................................
1. Open Quantifier Strategy 1. This contains the skeleton of our proof:
1. x P(x)
..
.
2. x P(x)
2. The first step in our informal proof was to decide to try to give a proof by
contradiction. Formalize this idea by filling in the following:
1. x P(x)
2. x P(x)
..
.
4. Intro: ?, ?
5. x P(x) Intro: 24
This step will check out because of the generous nature of Fitchs Intro
rule, which lets us strip o as well as add a negation.
3. We next decided to try to contradict x P(x) by proving x P(x) using
universal generalization. Formalize this as follows:
1. x P(x)
2. x P(x)
3. c
..
.
5. P(c) ?
6. x P(x) Intro: 35
7. Intro: 6, 1
8. x P(x) Intro: 27
Chapter 13
Strategy and tactics / 367
4. Recall how we proved P(c). We said that if P(c) were not the case, then
we would have P(c), and hence x P(x). But this contradicted the as-
sumption at step 2. Formalize this reasoning by filling in the rest of the
proof.
1. x P(x)
2. x P(x)
3. c
4. P(c)
5. x P(x) Intro: 4
6. Intro: 5, 2
7. P(c) Intro: 46
8. P(c) Elim: 7
9. x P(x) Intro: 38
10. Intro: 9, 1
11. x P(x) Intro: 210
5. This completes our formal proof of x P(x) from the premise x P(x).
Verify your proof and save it as Proof Quantifier Strategy 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Exercises
13.19 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Quantifier
Strategy 1.
Recall that in Exercises 12.112.3 on page 336, you were asked to give logical analyses of purported
proofs of some arguments involving nonsense predicates. In the following exercises, we return to these
arguments. If the argument is valid, submit a formal proof. If it is invalid, turn in an informal coun-
terexample. If you submit a formal proof, be sure to use the Exercise file supplied with Fitch. In order
to keep your hand in at using the propositional rules, we ask you not to use Taut Con in these proofs.
Section 13.3
368 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
Some of the following arguments are valid, some are not. For each, either use Fitch to give a formal
proof or use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample. In giving proofs, feel free to use Taut Con
if it helps.
For each of the following, use Fitch to give a formal proof of the argument. These look simple but some
of them are a bit tricky. Dont forget to first figure out an informal proof. Use Taut Con whenever it
is convenient but do not use FO Con.
13.28 x y Likes(x, y) 13.29 x (Small(x) Cube(x))
x Cube(x) x Small(x)
x y Likes(x, y)
x Cube(x)
Chapter 13
Strategy and tactics / 369
The following valid arguments come in pairs. The validity of the first of the pair makes crucial use of the
meanings of the blocks language predicates, whereas the second adds one or more premises, making the
result a first-order valid argument. For the latter, give a proof that does not make use of Ana Con. For
the former, give a proof that uses Ana Con but only where the premises and conclusions of the citation
are literals (including ). You may use Taut Con but do not use FO Con in any of the proofs.
Section 13.3
370 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
Section 13.4
Soundness and completeness
Section 13.5
Some review exercises
In this section we present more problems to help you solidify your understand-
ing of the methods of reasoning involving quantifiers. We also present some
more interesting problems from a theoretical point of view.
Exercises
Some of the following arguments are valid, some are not. For each, either use Fitch to give a formal
proof or use Tarskis World to construct a counterexample. In giving proofs, feel free to use Taut Con
if it helps.
Chapter 13
Some review exercises / 371
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
Each of the following is a valid argument of a type discussed in Section 10.3. Use Fitch to give a proof
of its validity. You may use Taut Con freely in these proofs.
13.51 13.52
x (P(x) y P(y)) x y [E(x, y) E(y, y)]
[Hint: Review your answer to Exer- This result might be called Russells
cise 12.22 where you should have given Theorem. It is connected with the fa-
an informal proof of something of this mous result known as Russells Paradox,
form.] which is discussed in Section 15.9. In
fact, it was upon discovering this that
Russell invented the Barber Paradox, to
explain his result to a general public.
13.53 Is x y LeftOf(x, y) a first-order consequence of x LeftOf(x, x)? If so, give a formal proof.
|. If not, give a reinterpretation of LeftOf and an example where the premise is true and the
conclusion is false.
The next exercises are intended to help you review the dierence between first-order satisfiability and
true logical possibility. All involve the four sentences in the file Padoas Sentences. Open that file now.
Section 13.5
372 / Formal Proofs and Quantifiers
13.54 Any three of the sentences in Padoas Sentences form a satisfiable set. There are four sets of three
sentences, so to show this, build four worlds, World 13.54.123, World 13.54.124, World 13.54.134,
and World 13.54.234,where the four sets are true. (Thus, for example, sentences 1, 2 and 4 should
be true in World 13.54.124.)
13.55 Give an informal proof that the four sentences in Padoas Sentences taken together are incon-
. sistent.
13.56 Is the set of sentences in Padoas Sentences first-order satisfiable, that is, satisfiable with some
. reinterpretation of the predicates other than identity? [Hint: Imagine a world where one of the
blocks is a sphere.]
13.57 Reinterpret the predicates Tet and Dodec in such a way that sentence 3 of Padoas Sentences
. comes out true in World 13.54.124. Since this is the only sentence that uses these predicates,
it follows that all four sentences would, with this reinterpretation, be true in this world. (This
shows that the set is first-order satisfiable.)
13.58 (Logical truth versus non-logical truth in all worlds) A distinction Tarskis World helps us to
|. understand is the dierence between sentences that are logically true and sentences that are,
for reasons that have nothing to do with logic, true in all worlds. The notion of logical truth
has to do with a sentence being true simply in virtue of the meaning of the sentence, and so
no matter how the world is. However, some sentences are true in all worlds, not because of
the meaning of the sentence or its parts, but because of, say, laws governing the world. We
can think of the constraints imposed by the innards of Tarskis World as analogues of physical
laws governing how the world can be. For example, the sentence which asserts that there are at
most 12 objects happens to hold in all the worlds that we can construct with Tarskis World.
However, it is not a logical truth.
Open Posts Sentences. Classify each sentence in one of the following ways: (A) a logical
truth, (B) true in all worlds that can be depicted using Tarskis World, but not a logical truth,
or (C) falsifiable in some world that can be depicted by Tarskis World. For each sentence of
type (C), build a world in which it is false, and save it as World 13.58.x, where x is the number
of the sentence. For each sentence of type (B), use a pencil and paper to depict a world in
which it is false. (In doing this exercise, assume that Medium simply means neither small nor
large, which seems plausible. However, it is not plausible to assume that Cube means neither a
dodecahedron nor tetrahedron, so you should not assume anything like this.)
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
QAB
where Q is a determiner expression like every, some, the, more than half the,
at least three, no, many, Maxs, etc.; A is a common noun phrase like cube,
student of logic, thing, etc.; and B is a verb phrase like sits in the corner or
is small.
Such sentences are used to express quantitative relationships between the
set of objects satisfying the common noun phrase and the set of objects satis-
fying the verb phrase. Here are some examples, with the determiner in bold:
These sentences say of the set A of cubes in the domain of discourse and
the set B of small things in the domain of discourse that
every A is a B,
some A is a B,
more than half the As are Bs,
at least three As are Bs,
no A is a B,
many As are Bs, and
Maxs A is a B.
373
374 / More about Quantification
example, to express more than half the As are Bs, it turns out that we need
to supplement fol to include new expressions that behave something like
and . When we add such expressions to the formal language, we call them
generalized quantifiers generalized quantifiers, since they extend the kinds of quantification we can
express in the language.
In this chapter, we will look at the logic of some English determiners
beyond some and all. We will consider not only determiners that can be ex-
pressed using the usual quantifiers of fol, but also determiners whose mean-
ings can only be captured by adding new quantifiers to fol.
In English, there are ways of expressing quantification other than deter-
miners. For example, the sentences
Max always eats pizza.
Max usually eats pizza.
Max often eats pizza.
Max seldom eats pizza.
Max sometimes eats pizza.
Max never eats pizza.
each express a quantitative relation between the set of times when Max eats
and the set of times when he eats pizza. But in these sentences it is the adverb
that is expressing quantification, not a determiner. While we are going to
adverbial quantification discuss the logic only of determiners, much of what we say can be extended to
other forms of quantification, including this kind of adverbial quantification.
In a sentence of the form Q A B, dierent determiners express very dierent
relations between A and B and so have very dierent logical properties. A valid
argument typically becomes invalid if we change any of the determiners. For
instance, while
No cube is small
d is a cube
d is not small
remains valid if many is replaced by any of the above determiners other than
no. These are clearly logical facts, things wed like to understand at a more
Chapter 14
Numerical quantification / 375
theoretical level. For example, well soon see that the determiners that can
replace Many in the second argument and still yield a valid argument are the
monotone increasing determiners.
There are two rather dierent approaches to studying quantification. One approaches to
approach studies determiners that can be expressed using the existing re- quantification
sources of fol. In the first three sections, we look at several important English
determiners that can be defined in terms of , , =, and the truth-functional
connectives, and then analyze their logical properties by means of these defini-
tions. The second approach is to strengthen fol by allowing a wider range of
quantifiers, capturing kinds of quantification not already expressible in fol.
In the final three sections, we look briefly at this second approach and its
resulting logic.
Section 14.1
Numerical quantification
We have already seen that many complex noun phrases can be expressed in
terms of (which really means everything, not just every) and (which
means something, not some). For example, Every cube left of b is small
can be paraphrased as Everything that is a cube and left of b is small, a
sentence that can easily be translated into fol using , and . Similarly,
No cube is small can be paraphrased as Everything is such that if it is a cube
then it is not small, which can again be easily translated into fol.
Other important examples of quantification that can be indirectly ex-
pressed in fol are numerical claims. By a numerical claim we mean a one numerical claims
that explicitly uses the numbers 1, 2, 3, . . . to say something about the rela-
tion between the As and the Bs. Here are three dierent kinds of numerical
claims:
At least two books arrived this week.
At most two books are missing from the shelf.
Exactly two books are on the table.
First-order languages do not in general allow us to talk directly about
numbers, only about elements of our domain of discourse. The blocks lan-
guage, for example, only talks about blocks, not about numbers. Still, it is
possible to express these three kinds of numerical claims in fol.
Recall that in fol, distinct names do not necessarily refer to distinct
objects. Similarly, distinct variables need not vary over distinct objects. For
example, both of the following sentences can be made true in a world with
Section 14.1
376 / More about Quantification
one object:
Cube(a) Small(a) Cube(b)
at least two In order to say that there are at least two cubes, you must find a way to
guarantee that they are dierent. For example, either of the following would
do:
Cube(a) Small(a) Cube(b) Large(b)
The most direct way, though, is simply to say that they are dierent:
x y [Cube(x) Cube(y) x = y]
This sentence asserts that there are at least two cubes. To say that there are
at least three cubes we need to add another and some more inequalities:
You will see in the You try it section below that all three of these inequalities
are really needed. To say that there are at least four objects takes four s
and six (= 3 + 2 + 1) inequalities; to say there are at least five takes five s
and 10 (= 4 + 3 + 2 + 1) inequalities, and so forth.
Turning to the second kind of numerical quantification, how can we say
at most two that there are at most two cubes? Well, one way to do it is by saying that
there are not at least three cubes:
Applying some (by now familiar) quantifier equivalences, starting with De-
Morgans Law, gives us the following equivalent sentence:
Chapter 14
Numerical quantification / 377
it as follows: There are at least two cubes and there are at most two cubes.
Translating each conjunct gives us a rather long sentence using five quantifiers:
x y [Cube(x) Cube(y) x = y]
If we translate this into English, we see that it says there are two distinct
objects, both cubes, and that any cube is one of these. This is a dierent way
of saying that there are exactly two cubes. (We ask you to give formal proofs
of their equivalence in Exercises 14.12 and 14.13.) Notice that this sentence
uses two existential quantifiers and one universal quantifier. An equivalent
way of saying this is as follows:
x y [x = y z (Cube(z) (z = x z = y))]
x y z [x = y (Cube(z) (z = x z = y))]
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. In this Try It, you will get to examine some of the claims made above in
more detail. Open Whiteheads Sentences.
2. The first sentence says that there are at least two objects and the second
sentence says that there are at most two objects. (Do you see how they
manage to say these things?) Build a model where the first two sentences
are both true.
Section 14.1
378 / More about Quantification
Chapter 14
Numerical quantification / 379
13. Sentence 14 says that there are exactly two tetrahedra. Check that it is
true in such worlds, but false if there are fewer or more than two.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Numerical quantification, when written out in full in fol, is hard to read abbreviations for
because of all the inequalities, especially when the numbers get to be more numerical claims
than 3 or 4, so a special notation has become fairly common:
n x P(x) for the fol sentence asserting There are at least n objects
satisfying P(x).
n x P(x) for the fol sentence asserting There are at most n objects
satisfying P(x).
!n x P(x) for the fol sentence asserting There are exactly n objects
satisfying P(x).
as long as y does not occur already in the w P(x). According to the con-
ventions we have just established, this should be abbreviated as !1 x P(x). In
practice, though, this is used so often that it is further shortened to !x P(x).
It is read there is a unique x such that P (x). Again, this is not a new quan-
tifier; ws in which it occurs are just abbreviations for longer ws involving
the old quantifiers.
We started out with the goal of learning how to express claims of the form
Q A B where Q is a numerical determiner and A is any common noun. But all
we have seen so far is how to express claims of the form there are at least/at
most/exactly n things satisfying P. Having learned how to do this, however,
its easy to express claims of the desired form. For example, to say At least
n cubes are small, we say There are at least n things that are small cubes.
Section 14.1
380 / More about Quantification
Similarly, to say There are at most n cubes that are small, we say There are
at most n things that are small cubes. Finally, to say There are exactly n cubes
that are small, we say There are exactly n things that are small cubes. These
observations probably seem so obvious that they dont require mentioning.
But we will soon see that nothing like this holds for some determiners, and that
the consequences are rather important for the general theory of quantification.
Remember
Exercises
14.1 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the files World Numerical 1
and World Numerical 2.
14.2 Give clear English translations of the following sentences of fol. Which of the following are
. logically equivalent and which are not? Explain your answers.
1. !x Tove(x) [Remember that the notation ! is an abbreviation, as explained above.]
2. x y [Tove(y) y = x]
3. x y [Tove(y) y = x]
4. x y [(Tove(x) Tove(y)) x = y]
5. x y [(Tove(x) Tove(y)) x = y]
14.3 (Translating numerical claims) In this exercise we will try our hand at translating English
sentences involving numerical claims.
Using Tarskis World, translate the following English sentences.
Open Peanos World. Note that all of the English sentences are true in this world. Check
to see that your translations are as well.
Chapter 14
Numerical quantification / 381
Open Bolzanos World. Here sentences 1, 3, and 5 are the only true ones. Verify that your
translations have the right truth values in this world.
Open Skolems World. Only sentence 5 is true in this world. Check your translations.
Finally, open Montagues World. In this world, sentences 2, 3, and 5 are the only true
ones. Check your translations.
14.4 (Saying more complicated things) Open Skolems World. Create a file called Sentences 14.4 and
describe the following features of Skolems World.
1. Use your first sentence to say that there are only cubes and tetrahedra.
2. Next say that there are exactly three cubes.
3. Express the fact that every cube has a tetrahedron that is to its right but is neither
in front of or in back of it.
4. Express the fact that at least one of the tetrahedra is between two other tetrahedra.
5. Notice that the further back something is, the larger it is. Say this.
6. Note that none of the cubes is to the right of any of the other cubes. Try to say this.
7. Observe that there is a single small tetrahedron and that it is in front of but to neither
side of all the other tetrahedra. State this.
If you have expressed yourself correctly, there is very little you can do to Skolems World without
making at least one of your sentences false. Basically, all you can do is stretch things out,
that is, move things apart while keeping them aligned. To see this, try making the following
changes. (Theres no need to turn in your answers, but try the changes.)
1. Add a new tetrahedron to the world. Find one of your sentences that comes out false.
Move the new tetrahedron so that a dierent sentence comes out false.
2. Change the size of one of the objects. What sentence now comes out false?
3. Change the shape of one of the objects. What sentence comes out false?
4. Slide one of the cubes to the left. What sentence comes out false?
5. Rearrange the three cubes. What goes wrong now?
14.5 (Ambiguity and numerical quantification) In the Try It on page 314, we saw that the sentence
is ambiguous, having both a strong and a weak reading. Using Tarskis World, open a new
sentence file and translate the strong and weak readings of this sentence into fol as sentences
(1) and (2). Remember that Tarskis World does not understand our abbreviation for at least
four so you will need to write this out in full. Check that the first sentence is true in Andersons
First World but not in Andersons Second World, while the second sentence is true in both worlds.
Make some changes to the worlds to help you check that your translations express what you
intend. Submit your sentence file.
Section 14.1
382 / More about Quantification
14.6 (Games of incomplete information) As you recall, you can sometimes know that a sentence
is true in a world without knowing how to play the game and win. Open Mostowskis World.
Translate the following into first-order logic. Save your sentences as Sentences 14.6. Now, with-
out using the 2-D view, make as good a guess as you can about whether the sentences are true
or not in the world. Once you have assessed a given sentence, use Verify to see if you are right.
Then, with the correct truth value checked, see how far you can go in playing the game. Quit
whenever you get stuck, and play again. Can you predict in advance when you will be able to
win? Do not look at the 2-D view until you have finished the whole exercise.
1. There are at least two tetrahedra.
2. There are at least three tetrahedra.
3. There are at least two dodecahedra.
4. There are at least three dodecahedra.
5. Either there is a small tetrahedron behind a small cube or there isnt.
6. Every large cube is in front of something.
7. Every tetrahedron is in back of something.
8. Every small cube is in back of something.
9. Every cube has something behind it.
10. Every dodecahedron is small, medium, or large.
11. If e is to the left of every dodecahedron, then it is not a dodecahedron.
Now modify the world so that the true sentences are still true, but so that it will be clear how
to play the game and win. When you are done, just submit your sentence file.
14.7 (Satisfiability) Recall that a set of sentences is satisfiable if there is world in which it is true.
|. Determine whether the following set of sentences is satisfiable. If it is, build a world. If it is
not, use informal methods of proof to derive a contradiction from the set.
1. Every cube is to the left of every tetrahedron.
2. There are no dodecahedra.
3. There are exactly four cubes.
4. There are exactly four tetrahedra.
5. No tetrahedron is large.
6. Nothing is larger than anything to its right.
7. One thing is to the left of another just in case the latter is behind the former.
14.8 (Numbers of variables) Tarskis World only allows you to use six variables. Lets explore what
|. kind of limitation this imposes on our language.
1. Translate the sentence There are at least two objects, using only the predicate =. How
many variables do you need?
2. Translate There are at least three objects. How many variables do you need?
Chapter 14
Proving numerical claims / 383
3. It is impossible express the sentence There are at least seven objects using only = and
the six variables available in Tarskis World, no matter how many quantifiers you use.
Try to prove this. [Warning: This is true, but it is very challenging to prove. Contrast
this problem with the one below.] Submit your two sentences and turn in your proof.
14.9 (Reusing variables) In spite of the above exercise, there are in fact sentences we can express
using just the six available variables that can only be true in worlds with at least seven objects.
For example, in Robinsons Sentences, we give such a sentence, one that only uses the variables
x and y.
1. Open this file. Build a world where there are six small cubes arranged on the front
row and test the sentences truth. Now add one more small cube to the front row, and
test the sentences truth again. Then play the game committed (incorrectly) to false.
Can you see the pattern in Tarskis Worlds choice of objects? When it needs to pick
an object for the variable x, it picks the leftmost object to the right of all the previous
choices. Then, when it needs to pick an object for the variable y, it picks the last object
chosen. Can you now see how the reused variables are working?
2. Now delete one of the cubes, and play the game committed (incorrectly) to true. Do
you see why you cant win?
3. Now write a sentence that says there are at least four objects, one in front of the next.
Use only variables x and y. Build some worlds to check whether your sentence is true
under the right conditions. Submit your sentence file.
Section 14.2
Proving numerical claims
Since numerical claims can be expressed in fol, we can use the methods of
proof developed in previous chapters to prove numerical claims. However, as
you may have noticed in doing the exercises, numerical claims are not always
terribly perspicuous when expressed in fol notation. Indeed, expressing a
numerical claim in fol and then trying to prove the result is a recipe for
disaster. It is all too easy to lose ones grasp on what needs to be proved.
Suppose, for example, that you are told there are exactly two logic class-
rooms and that each classroom contains exactly three computers. Suppose you
also know that every computer is in some logic classroom. From these assump-
tions it is of course quite easy to prove that there are exactly six computers.
How would the proof go?
Section 14.2
384 / More about Quantification
This may seem like making pretty heavy weather of an obvious fact, but it
illustrates two things. First, to prove a numerical claim of the form there exist
exactly n objects x such that P (x), which we agreed to abbreviate as !n x P(x),
you need to prove two things: that there are at least n such objects, and that
there are at most n such objects.
formal proofs of The proof also illustrates a point about fol. If we were to translate our
numerical claims premises and desired conclusion into fol, things would get quite complicated.
If we then tried to prove our fol conclusion from the fol premises using the
rules we have presented earlier, we would completely lose track of the basic
fact that makes the proof work, namely, that 2 3 = 6. Rather than explicitly
state and use this fact, as we did above, we would have to rely on it in a hidden
way in the combinatorial details of the proof. While it would be possible to
give such a proof, no one would really do it that way.
The problem has to do with a syntactic shortcoming of fol. Not having
quantifiers that directly express numerical claims in terms of numbers, such
claims must be translated using just and . If we were to add numerical
quantifiers to fol, we would be able to give proofs that correspond much
more closely to the intuitive proofs. Still, the theoretical expressive power of
the language would remain the same.
a new method of proof We can think of the above proof as illustrating a new method of proof.
When trying to prove !n x P(x), prove two things: that there are at least n
objects satisfying P(x), and that there are at most n such objects.
A particularly important special case of this method is with uniqueness
claims, those of the form !x P(x), which say there is exactly one object with
some property. To prove such a claim, we must prove two things, existence
and uniqueness. In proving existence, we prove that there is at least one
object satisfying P(x). Given that, we can then show uniqueness by show-
ing that there is at most one such object. To give an example, let us prove
!x [Even(x) Prime(x)].
Proof: We first prove existence, that is, that there is an even prime.
This we do simply by noting that 2 is even and a prime. Thus,
Chapter 14
Proving numerical claims / 385
Proof: We first prove existence, that is, that there is an even prime.
This we do simply by noting that 2 is even and a prime. We then
prove uniqueness, by proving that any even prime must be 2. First,
since it is even, it must be divisible by 2. But being prime, if it is
divisible by 2, it is 2.
Since the numerical quantifiers are really shorthand for more complicated
expressions in our language, there is no real need to introduce rules that
specifically apply to them. Of course the same could have been said for ,
but we saw that it was much more convenient to have rules of proof for
than to reduce things to and and use their rules of proof. But the situation
is dierent with numerical quantifiers. In practice, people rarely give formal
proofs of numerical claims expressed in fol, since they quickly become too
complex, with or without special rules for these quantifiers. With numerical
claims, informal proofs are the order of the day.
Remember
Section 14.2
386 / More about Quantification
Exercises
Use Fitch to give formal proofs of the following arguments. You may use Taut Con where it is con-
venient. We urge you to work backwards, especially with the last problem, whose proof is simple in
conception but complex in execution.
x y (Cube(y) y = x)
14.11 x y (Cube(y) y = x)
The next two exercises contain arguments with similar premises and the same conclusion. If the argument
is valid, turn in an informal proof. If it is not, submit a world in which the premises are true but the
conclusion is false.
14.14 There are exactly four cubes. 14.15 There are exactly four cubes.
|. Any column that contains a cube con- |. Any column that contains a cube con-
tains a tetrahedron, and vice versa. tains a tetrahedron, and vice versa.
No tetrahedron is in back of any other No column contains two objects of the
tetrahedron. same shape.
There are exactly four tetrahedra. There are exactly four tetrahedra.
Chapter 14
Proving numerical claims / 387
The following exercises state some logical truths or valid arguments involving numerical quantifiers. Give
informal proofs of each. Contemplate what it would be like to give a formal proof (for specific values of
n and m) and be thankful we didnt ask you to give one!
14.16
.
0 x S(x) x S(x)
[The only hard part about this is figuring out what 0 x S(x) abbreviates.]
14.21 We have seen that x y R(x, y) is logically equivalent to y x R(x, y), and similarly for .
. What happens if we replace both of these quantifiers by some numerical quantifier? In partic-
ular, is the following argument valid?
!x !y R(x, y)
!y !x R(x, y)
The following exercises contain true statements about the domain of natural numbers 0, 1, . . . . Give
informal proofs of these statements.
Section 14.2
388 / More about Quantification
Section 14.3
The, both, and neither
The English determiners the, both, and neither are extremely common. Indeed,
the is one of the most frequently used words in the English language. (We
used it twice in that one sentence.) In spite of their familiarity, their logical
properties are subtle and, for that matter, still a matter of some dispute.
To see why, suppose I say The elephant in my closet is not wrinkling my
clothes. What would you make of this, given that, as you probably guessed,
there is no elephant in my closet? Is it simply false? Or is there something else
wrong with it? If it is false, then it seems like its negation should be true. But
the negation seems to be the claim that the elephant in my closet is wrinkling
my clothes. Similar puzzles arise with both and neither:
definite descriptions Noun phrases of the form the A are called definite descriptions and the above
analysis is called the Russellian analysis of definite descriptions.
both, neither While Russell did not explicitly consider both or neither, the spirit of his
analysis extends naturally to these determiners. We could analyze Both cubes
are small as saying that there are exactly two cubes and each of them is small:
Chapter 14
The, both, and neither / 389
Similarly, Neither cube is small would be construed as saying that there are
exactly two cubes and each of them is not small:
This is not, logically speaking, the negation of The cube is small. Indeed definite descriptions
both sentences could be false if there are no cubes or if there are too many. and negation
The superficial form of the English sentences makes them look like negations
of one another, but according to Russell, the negation of The cube is small
is something like Either there is not exactly one cube or it is not small. Or
perhaps more clearly, If there is exactly one cube then it is not small. Similarly,
the negation of Both cubes are small would not be Both cubes are not small
but If there are exactly two cubes then they are not both small.
Russells analysis is not without its detractors. The philosopher P. F.
Strawson, for example, argued that Russells analysis misses an important
feature of our use of the determiner the. Return to our example of the ele-
phant. Consider these three sentences:
Section 14.3
390 / More about Quantification
cannot make a successful claim unless the presuppositions of your claim are
satisfied. With our elephant example, the sentence can only be used to make
a claim in case there is one, and only one, elephant in the speakers closet.
Otherwise the sentence simply misfires, and so does not have a truth value at
all. It is much like using an fol sentence containing a name b to describe a
world where no object is named b. Similarly, on Strawsons approach, if we
use both elephants in my closet or neither elephant in my closet, our statement
simply misfires unless there are exactly two elephants in my closet.
If Strawsons objection is right, then there will be no general way of trans-
lating the, both, or neither into fol, since fol sentences (at least those without
names in them) always have truth values. There is nothing to stop us from
enriching fol to have expressions that work this way. Indeed, this has been
proposed and studied, but that is a dierent, richer language than fol.
On the other hand, there have been rejoinders to Strawsons objection. For
conversational example, it has been suggested that when we say The elephant in my closet is
implicature not wrinkling my clothes, the suggestion that there is an elephant in my closet
is simply a conversational implicature. To see if this is plausible, we try the
cancellability test. Does the following seem coherent or not? The elephant
in my closet is not wrinkling my clothes. In fact, there is no elephant in my
closet. Some people think that, read with the right intonation, this makes
perfectly good sense. Others disagree.
As we said at the start of this section, these are subtle matters and there is
still no universally accepted theory of how these determiners work in English.
What we can say is that the Russellian analysis is as close as we can come
in fol, that it is important, and that it captures at least some uses of these
determiners. It is the one we will treat in the exercises that follow.
Remember
Chapter 14
The, both, and neither / 391
Exercises
14.27 (The Strawsonian analysis of definite descriptions) Using Tarskis World, open a sentence file
and write the Russellian analysis of the following two sentences:
1. b is left of the cube.
2. b is not left of the cube.
Build a world containing a dodec named b and one other block in which neither of your
translations is true. To do so, you will need to violate what Strawson would call the common
presupposition of these two sentences. Submit both the sentence and world files.
14.28 (The Russellian analysis of both and neither) Open Russells World. Notice that the following
sentences are all true:
1. Both cubes are medium.
2. Neither dodec is small.
3. Both cubes are in front of the tetrahedron.
4. Both cubes are left of both dodecahedra.
5. Neither cube is in back of either dodecahedron.
Start a new sentence file and write the Russellian analysis of these five sentences. Since Tarskis
World doesnt let you use the notation !2 , you may find it easier to write the sentences on
paper first, using this abbreviation, and then translate them into proper fol. Check that your
translations are true in Russells World. Then make some changes to the sizes and positions of
the blocks and again check that your translations have the same truth values as the English
sentences.
14.29 Discuss the meaning of the determiner Maxs. Notice that you can say Maxs pet is happy, but
. also Maxs pets are happy. Give a Russellian and a Strawsonian analysis of this determiner.
Which do you think is better?
Section 14.3
392 / More about Quantification
Section 14.4
Adding other determiners to fol
We have seen that many English determiners can be captured in fol, though
by somewhat convoluted circumlocutions. But there are also many determin-
ers that simply arent expressible in fol. A simple example is the determiner
most, more than half Most, as in Most cubes are large. There are two diculties. One is that the
meaning of most is a bit indeterminate. Most cubes are large clearly implies
More than half the cubes are large, but does the latter imply the former? In-
tuitions dier. But even if we take it to mean the same as More than half,
it cannot be expressed in fol, since the determiner More than half is not
expressible in fol.
It is possible to give a mathematical proof of this fact. For example, con-
sider the sentence:
To see the problem, notice that the English sentence makes a claim about the
relative sizes of the set A of small dodecahedra and the set B of dodecahe-
dra that are not small. It says that the set A is larger than the set B and
it does so without claiming anything about how many objects there are in
these sets or in the domain of discourse. To express the desired sentence, we
might try something like the following (where we use A(x) as shorthand for
Dodec(x) Small(x), and B(x) as shorthand for Dodec(x) Small(x)):
The trouble is, there is no place to stop this disjunction! Without some
fixed finite upper bound on the total number of objects in the domain, we
need all of the disjuncts, and so the translation of the English sentence would
be an infinitely long sentence, which fol does not allow. If we knew there
were a maximum of twelve objects in the world, as in Tarskis World, then we
could write a sentence that said what we needed; but without this constraint,
the sentence would have to be infinite.
This is not in itself a proof that the English sentence cannot be expressed
unexpressible in fol in fol. But it does pinpoint the problem and, using this idea, one can actually
give such a proof. In particular, it is possible to show that for any first-order
sentence S of the blocks language, if S is true in every world where more than
half the dodecahedra are small, then it is also true in some world where less
Chapter 14
Adding other determiners to fol / 393
than half the dodecahedra are small. Unfortunately, the proof of this would
take us beyond the scope of this book.
The fact that we cannot express more than half in fol doesnt mean there
is anything suspect about this determiner. It just means that it does not fall
within the expressive resources of the invented language fol. Nothing stops
us from enriching fol by adding a new quantifier symbol, say Most. Lets
explore this idea for a moment, since it will shed light on some topics from
earlier in the book.
Well begin by telling you how not to add the determiner Most to the language.
Following the lead from and , we might start by adding the following clause
to our grammatical rules on page 233:
We might then say that the sentence Most x S(x) is true in a world just in
case more objects in the domain satisfy S(x) than dont.1 Thus the sentence
Most x Cube(x) says that most things are cubes.
How can we use our new language to express our sentence Most dodeca-
hedra are small ? The answer is, we cant. If we look back at , , and the
numerical determiners, we note something interesting. It so happens that we
can paraphrase every cube is small and some cube is small using everything
and something; namely, Everything is such that if it is a cube then it is small
and Something is a cube and it is small. At the end of the section on numerical
quantification, we made a similar observation. There is, however, simply no
way to paraphrase Most dodecahedra are small using Most things and expres-
sions that can be translated into fol. After all, it may be that most cubes
are small, even when there are only three or four cubes and millions of dodec-
ahedra and tetrahedra in our domain. Talking about most things is not going
to let us say much of interest about the lonely cubes.
These observations point to something interesting about quantification
and the way it is represented in fol. For any determiner Q, let us mean by
its general form any use of the form Q A B as described at the beginning of
this chapter. In contrast, by its special form well mean a use of the form Q
thing(s) B. The following table of examples makes this clearer.
1 For
the set-theoretically sophisticated, we note that this definition make sense even if
the domain of discourse is infinite.
Section 14.4
394 / More about Quantification
Many determiners have the property that the general form can be reduced
to the special form by the suitable use of truth-functional connectives. Lets
reducibility call such a determiner reducible. We have seen that every, some, no, and the
various numerical determiners are reducible in this sense. Here are a couple
of the reductions:
But some determiners, including most, many, few, and the, are not re-
ducible. For non-reducible determiners Q, we cannot add Q to fol by simply
adding the special form in the way we attempted here. We will see how we
can add such determiners in a moment.
There was some good fortune involved when logicians added and as
they did. Since every and some are reducible, the definition of fol can get away
with just the special forms, which makes the language particularly simple. On
the other hand, the fact that fol takes the special form as basic also results
in many of the diculties in translating from English to fol that we have
noted. In particular, the fact that the reduction of Every A uses , while that
of Some A uses , causes a lot of confusion among beginning students.
The observations made above show that if we are going to add a quantifier
new grammatical form like Most to our language, we must add the general form, not just the special
form. Thus, the formation rule should take two ws and a variable and create
a new w:
The w Most x (A, B) is read most x satisfying A satisfy B. Notice that the
syntactic form of this w exhibits the fact that Most x (A, B) expresses a binary
relation between the set A of things satisfying A and the set B of things that
satisfy B. We could use the abbreviation Most x (S) for Most x (x = x, S); this
Chapter 14
Adding other determiners to fol / 395
is read most things x satisfy S. This, of course, is the special form of the
determiner, whereas the general form takes two ws.
We need to make sure that our new symbol Most means what we want it
to. Toward this end, let us agree that the sentence Most x (A, B) is true in a
world just in case most objects that satisfy A(x) satisfy B(x) (where by this
we mean more objects satisfy A(x) and B(x) than satisfy A(x) and B(x)).
With these conventions, we can translate our English sentence faithfully as:
The order here is very important. While the above sentences says that most
dodecahedra are small, the sentence
says that most small things are dodecahedra. These sentences are true under
very dierent conditions. We will look more closely at the logical properties
of Most and some other determiners in the next section.
Once we see the general pattern, we see that any meaningful determiner
Q of English can be added to fol in a similar manner.
Q x (S)
Section 14.4
396 / More about Quantification
Chapter 14
Adding other determiners to fol / 397
Remember
Exercises
14.30 Some of the following English determiners are reducible, some are not. If they are reducible,
. explain how the general form can be reduced to the special form. If they do not seem to be
reducible, simply say so.
1. At least three
2. Both
3. Finitely many
4. At least a third
5. All but one
14.31 Open Coopers World. Suppose we have expanded fol by adding the following expressions:
. b1 , meaning all but one,
Few, interpreted as meaning at most 10%, and
Most, interpreted as meaning more than half.
Translate the following sentences into this extended language. Then say which are true in
Coopers World. (You will have to use paper to write out your translations, since Tarskis World
does not understand these quantifiers. If the sentence is ambiguousfor example, sentence 5
give both translations and say whether each is true.)
Section 14.4
398 / More about Quantification
14.32 Once again open Coopers World. This time translate the following sentences into English and
. say which are true in Coopers World. Make sure your English translations are clear and
unambiguous.
1. Most y (Tet(y), Small(y))
2. Most z (Cube(z), LeftOf(z, b))
3. Most y Cube(y)
4. Most x (Tet(x), y Adjoins(x, y))
5. y Most x (Tet(x), Adjoins(x, y))
6. Most x (Cube(x), y Adjoins(x, y))
7. y Most x (Cube(x), Adjoins(x, y))
8. Most y (y = b)
9. x (Most y (y = x))
10. Most x (Cube(x), Most y (Tet(y), FrontOf(x, y))
Section 14.5
The logic of generalized quantification
In this section we look briefly at some of the logical properties of determin-
ers. Since dierent determiners typically have dierent meanings, we expect
them to have dierent logical properties. In particular, we expect the logical
truths and valid arguments involving determiners to be highly sensitive to the
particular determiners involved. Some of the logical properties of determiners
fall into nice clusters, though, and this allows us to classify determiners in
logically significant ways.
We will assume that Q is some determiner of English and that we have
introduced a formal counterpart Q into fol in the manner described at the
end of the last section.
Conservativity
As it happens, there is one logical property that holds of virtually all single-
word determiners in every natural language. Namely, for any predicates A and
B, the following are logically equivalent:
Q x (A(x), B(x)) Q x (A(x), (A(x) B(x)))
conservativity property This is called the conservativity property of determiners. Here are two instances
of the half of conservativity, followed by two instances of the half:
If no doctor is a doctor and a lawyer, then no doctor is a lawyer.
If exactly three cubes are small cubes, then exactly three cubes
Chapter 14
The logic of generalized quantification / 399
are small.
If few actors are rich, then few actors are rich and actors.
If all good actors are rich, then all good actors are rich and good
actors.
Monotonicity
Q x (A(x), B(x))
x (B(x) B (x))
Q x (A(x), B (x))
Section 14.5
400 / More about Quantification
The reason this test works is that the second premise in the definition of
monotone increasing, x (B(x) B (x)), is automatically true. If we try out
the test with a few determiners, we see, for example, that some, every, and
most are monotone increasing, but few is not.
monotone decreasing On the other hand, Q is said to be monotone decreasing if things work in
the opposite direction, moving from the larger set B to a smaller set B:
Q x (A(x), B (x))
x (B(x) B (x))
Q x (A(x), B(x))
The test for monotone decreasing determiners is just the opposite as for
monotone increasing determiners:
Test for monotone decreasing determiners: Q is monotone decreasing
if and only if the following argument is valid:
Chapter 14
The logic of generalized quantification / 401
the classifications shown in Table 14.1. To apply our test to the first column
of the table, note that the following argument is valid, and remains so even if
most is replaced by any determiner in this column:
On the other hand, if we replace most by any of the determiners in the other
columns, the resulting argument is clearly invalid.
To apply the test to the list of monotone decreasing determiners we observe
that the following argument is valid, and remains so if no is replaced by any
of the other determiners in the second column:
Persistence
Q x (A(x), B(x))
x (A(x) A (x))
Q x (A (x), B(x))
monotonicity as right monotonicity, since they have to do with the left and right arguments,
respectively, when we look at Q A B as a binary relation Q(A, B).
Section 14.5
402 / More about Quantification
Q x (A (x), B(x))
x (A(x) A (x))
Q x (A(x), B(x))
To test a determiner for persistence or anti-persistence, try out the two argu-
ment forms given below and see whether the result is valid:
Applying these tests gives us the results shown in Table 14.2. Make sure
you try out some or all of the entries to make sure you understand how the
tests work. You will want to refer to this table in doing the exercises.
The properties of monotonicity and persistence play a large role in ordinary
reasoning with determiners. Suppose, by way of example, that your father is
trying to convince you to stay on the family farm rather than become an
actor. He might argue as follows:
Chapter 14
The logic of generalized quantification / 403
You want to be rich, right? Well, according to this report, few actors
have incomes above the federal poverty level. Hence, few actors are
rich.
Your fathers argument depends on the fact that few is monotone decreasing.
The set of rich people is a subset of those with incomes above the poverty
level, so if few actors are in the second set, few are in the first. Notice that
we immediately recognize the validity of this inference without even thinking
twice about it.
Suppose you were to continue the discussion by pointing out that the actor
Brad Pitt is extraordinarily rich. Your father might go on this way:
Several organic farmers I know are richer than Brad Pitt. So even
some farmers are extraordinarily rich.
This may seem like an implausible premise, but you know fathers. In any
case, the argument is valid, though perhaps unsound. Its validity rests on the
fact that Several is both persistent and monotone increasing. By persistence,
we can conclude that several farmers are richer than Brad Pitt (since the
organic farmers are a subset of the farmers), and by monotonicity that several
farmers are extraordinarily rich (since everyone richer than Brad Pitt is).
Finally, from the fact that several farmers are extraordinarily rich it obviously
follows that some farmers are (see Exercise 14.51).
There are many other interesting topics related to the study of determiners,
but this introduction should give you a feel for the kinds of things we can
discover about determiners, and the large role they play in everyday reasoning.
Remember
Section 14.5
404 / More about Quantification
Exercises
For each of the following arguments, decide whether it is valid. If it is, explain why. This explanation
could consist in referring to one of the determiner properties mentioned in this section or it could consist
in an informal proof. If the argument is not valid, carefully describe a counterexample.
14.33 Few cubes are large. 14.34 Few cubes are large.
. .
Few cubes are large cubes. Few large things are cubes.
14.35 Many cubes are large. 14.36 Few cubes are large.
. .
Many cubes are not small. Few cubes are not small.
14.37 Few cubes are not small. 14.38 Most cubes are left of b.
. .
Few cubes are large. Most small cubes are left of b.
14.39 At most three cubes are left of b. 14.40 Most cubes are not small.
. .
At most three small cubes are left of b. Most cubes are large.
14.41 x [Dodec(x) Most y (Dodec(y), y = x))] 14.42 At least three small cubes are left of
. . b.
!x Dodec(x)
At least three cubes are left of b.
14.43 Most small cubes are left of b. 14.44 Most tetrahedra are left of b.
. . a is a tetrahedron in the same column
Most cubes are left of b.
as b.
a is not right of anything in the same
row as b.
Most tetrahedra are not in the same
row as b.
14.45 Only cubes are large. 14.46 Only tetrahedra are large tetrahedra.
. .
Only cubes are large cubes. Only tetrahedra are large.
Chapter 14
The logic of generalized quantification / 405
14.47 Most of the students brought a snack 14.48 Most of the students brought a snack
. to class. . to class.
Most of the students were late to Most of the students were late to
class. class.
Most of the students were late to class At least one student was late to class
and brought a snack. and brought a snack.
14.49 Most former British colonies are 14.50 Many are called.
. democracies. . Few are chosen.
All English speaking countries were
Most are rejected.
formerly British colonies.
Most English speaking countries are
democracies.
14.51 In one of our example arguments, we noted that Several A B implies Some A B. In general, a
. determiner Q is said to have existential import if Q A B logically implies Some A B. Classify
each of the determiners listed in Table 14.2 as to whether it has existential import. For those
that dont, give informal counterexamples. Discuss any cases that seem problematic.
14.52 Consider a hypothetical English determiner allbut. For example, we might say Allbut cubes
. are small to mean that all the blocks except the cubes are small. Give an example to show
that allbut is not conservative. Is it monotone increasing or decreasing? Persistent or anti-
persistent? Illustrate with arguments expressed in English augmented with allbut.
14.53 (Only) Whether or not only is a determiner, it could still be added to fol, allowing expressions
. of the form Only x (A, B), which would be true if and only if only As are Bs.
1. While Only is not conservative, it does satisfy a very similar property. What is it?
2. Discuss monotonicity and persistence for Only. Illustrate your discussion with argu-
ments expressed in English.
14.54 (Adverbs of temporal quantification) It is interesting to extend the above discussion of quan-
. tification from determiners to so-called adverbs of temporal quantification, like always, often,
usually, seldom, sometimes, and never. To get a hint how this might go, lets explore the
ambiguities in the English sentence Max usually feeds Carl at 2:00 p.m.
Earlier, we treated expressions like 2:00 as names of times on a particular day. To
interpret this sentence in a reasonable way, however, we need to treat such expres-
sions as predicates of times. So we need to add to our language a predicate 2pm(t)
that holds of those times t (in the domain of discourse) that occur at 2 p.m., no mat-
ter on what day they occur. Let us suppose that Usually means most times. Thus,
Section 14.5
406 / More about Quantification
Express this claim using an unambiguous English sentence. Then elucidate the dier-
ence between this claim and the first by describing situations in which each is true
while the other isnt.
3. Are the same ambiguities present in the sentence Claire seldom feeds Folly at 2:00
p.m.? How about with the other adverbs listed above?
4. Can you think of yet a third interpretation of Max usually feeds Carl at 2:00 p.m.,
one that is not captured by either of these translations? If so, try to express it in our
language or some expansion of it.
Section 14.6
Other expressive limitations of first-order logic
The expressions in bold take two common noun expressions and a verb ex-
pression to make a sentence. The techniques used to study generalized quan-
tification in earlier sections can be extended to study these determiners, but
three place we have to think of them as expressing three place relations on sets, not just
quantification two place relations. Thus, if we added these determiners to the language, they
would have the general form Q x (A(x), B(x), C(x)).
Chapter 14
Other expressive limitations of first-order logic / 407
Exercises
14.55 Try to translate the nursery rhyme about Humpty Dumpty into fol. Point out the various
. linguistic mechanisms that go beyond fol. Discuss this in class.
Section 14.6
408 / More about Quantification
14.56 Consider the following two claims. Does either follow logically from the other? Are they logically
. equivalent? Explain your answers.
1. I can eat every apple in the bowl.
2. I can eat any apple in the bowl.
14.57 Recall the first-order language introduced in Table 1.2, page 30. Some of the following can be
. given first-order translations using that language, some cannot. Translate those that can be.
For the others, explain why they cannot be faithfully translated, and discuss whether they
could be translated with additional names, predicates, function symbols, and quantifiers, or if
the shortcoming in the language is more serious.
1. Claire gave Max at least two pets at 2:00 pm.
2. Claire gave Max at most two pets at 2:00 pm.
3. Claire gave Max several pets at 2:00 pm.
4. Claire was a student before Max was.
5. The pet Max gave Claire at 2:00 pm was hungry.
6. Most pets were hungry at noon.
7. All but two pets were hungry at noon.
8. There is at least one student who made Max angry every time he (or she) gave Max a
pet.
9. Max was angry whenever a particular student gave him a pet.
10. If someone gave Max a pet, it must have been Claire.
11. No pet fed by Max between 2:00 and 2:05 belonged to Claire.
12. If Claire fed one of Maxs pets before 2:00 pm, then Max was angry at 2:00 pm.
13. Follys owner was a student.
14. Before 3:00, no one gave anyone a pet unless it was hungry.
15. No one should give anyone a pet unless it is hungry.
16. A pet that is not hungry always belongs to someone or other.
17. A pet that is not hungry must belong to someone or other.
18. Max was angry at 2:00 pm because Claire had fed one of his pets.
19. When Max gave Folly to Claire, Folly was hungry, but Folly was not hungry five minutes
later.
20. No student could possibly be a pet.
14.58 Here is a famous puzzle. There was a Roman who went by two names, Cicero and Tully.
. Discuss the validity or invalidity of the following argument.
Bill claims Cicero was a great orator.
Cicero is Tully.
Bill claims Tully was a great orator.
Chapter 14
Other expressive limitations of first-order logic / 409
What is at stake here is nothing more or less than the principle that if (. . . a . . . ) is true, and
a = b, then (. . . b . . . ) is true. [Hint: Does the argument sound more reasonable if we replace
claims by claims that? By the way, the puzzle is usually stated with believes rather than
claims.]
The following more dicult exercises are not specifically relevant to this section, but to the general topic
of truth of quantified sentences. They can be considered as research projects in certain types of classes.
14.59 (Persistence through expansion) As we saw in Exercise 11.5, page 301, some sentences simply
. cant be made false by adding objects of various sorts to the world. Once they are true, they
stay true. For example, the sentence There is at least one cube and one tetrahedron, if true,
cannot be made false by adding objects to the world. This exercise delves into the analysis of
this phenomenon in a bit more depth.
Lets say that a sentence A is persistent through expansion if, whenever it is true, it remains
true no matter how many objects are added to the world. (In logic books, this is usually called
just persistence, or persistence under extensions.) Notice that this is a semantic notion. That
is, its defined in terms of truth in worlds. But there is a corresponding syntactic notion. Call a
sentence existential if it is logically equivalent to a prenex sentence containing only existential
quantifiers.
Show that Cube(a) x FrontOf(x, a) is an existential sentence.
Show that every existential sentence is persistent through expansion. [Hint: You will have
to prove something slightly stronger, by induction on ws. If you are not familiar with
induction on ws, just try to understand why this is the case. If you are familiar with
induction, try to give a rigorous proof.] Conclude that every sentence equivalent to an
existential sentence is persistent through expansion.
It is a theorem, due to Tarski and Los (a Polish logician whose name is pronounced more like
wash than like loss), that any sentence that is persistent through expansion is existential.
Since this is the converse of what you were asked to prove, we can conclude that a sentence
is persistent through expansion if and only if it is existential. This is a classic example of a
theorem that gives a syntactic characterization of some semantic notion. For a proof of the
theorem, see any textbook in model theory.
14.60 (Invariance under motion, part 1) The real world does not hold still, the way the world of
mathematical objects does. Things move around. The truth values of some sentences change
with such motion, while the truth values of other sentences dont. Open Ockhams World and
Ockhams Sentences. Verify that all the sentences are true in the given world. Make as many
of Ockhams Sentences false as you can by just moving objects around. Dont add or remove
any objects from the world, or change their size or shape. You should be able to make false (in a
Section 14.6
410 / More about Quantification
single world) all of the sentences containing any spatial predicates, that is, containing LeftOf,
RightOf, FrontOf, BackOf, or Between. (However, this is a quirk of this list of sentences, as we
will see in the next exercise.) Save the world as World 14.60.
14.61 (Invariance under motion, part 2) Call a sentence invariant under motion if, for every world,
. the truth value of the sentence (whether true or false) does not vary as objects move around
in that world.
1. Prove that if a sentence does not contain any spatial predicates, then it is invariant
under motion.
2. Give an example of a sentence containing a spatial predicate that is nonetheless in-
variant under motion.
3. Give another such example. But this time, make sure your sentence is not first-order
equivalent to any sentence that doesnt contain spatial predicates.
14.62 (Persistence under growth, part 1) In the real world, things not only move around, they also
grow larger. (Some things also shrink, but ignore that for now.) Starting with Ockhams World,
make the following sentences true by allowing some of the objects to grow:
1. x Small(x)
2. x y (Cube(x) Dodec(y) Larger(y, x))
3. y (Cube(y) v (v = y Larger(v, y)))
4. x y (Large(x) Large(y) x = y)
How many of Ockhams Sentences are false in this world? Save your world as World 14.62.
14.63 (Persistence under growth, part 2) Say that a sentence S is persistent under growth if, for
. every world in which S is true, S remains true if some or all of the objects in that world get
larger. Thus, Large(a) and Small(a) are persistent under growth, but Smaller(a, b) isnt. Give
a syntactic definition of as large a set of sentences as you can for which every sentence in the
set is persistent under growth. Can you prove that all of these sentences are persistent under
growth?
Chapter 14
Part III
Applications and
Metatheory
Chapter 15
Over the past hundred years, set theory has become an important and useful
part of mathematics. It is used both in mathematics itself, as a sort of universal
framework for describing other mathematical theories, and also in applications
outside of mathematics, especially in computer science, linguistics, and the
other symbolic sciences. The reason set theory is so useful is that it provides
us with tools for modeling an extraordinary variety of structures.
Personally, we think of sets as being a lot like Tinkertoys or Lego blocks:
basic kits out of which we can construct models of practically anything. If modeling in set theory
you go on to study mathematics, you will no doubt take courses in which
natural numbers are modeled by sets of a particular kind, and real numbers
are modeled by sets of another kind. In the study of rational decision making,
economists use sets to model situations in which rational agents choose among
competing alternatives. Later in this chapter, well do a little of this, modeling
properties, relations, and functions as sets. These models are used extensively
in philosophy, computer science, and mathematics. In Chapter 18 we will use
these same tools to make rigorous our notions of first-order consequence and
first-order validity.
In this chapter, though, we will start the other way around, applying
what we have learned about first-order logic to the study of set theory. Since logic and set theory
set theory is generally presented as an axiomatized theory within a first-
order language, this gives us an opportunity to apply just about everything
weve learned so far. We will be expressing various set-theoretic claims in fol,
figuring out consequences of these claims, and giving informal proofs of these
claims. The one thing we wont be doing very much is constructing formal
proofs of set-theoretic claims. This may disappoint you. Many students are
initially intimidated by formal proofs, but come to prefer them over informal
proofs because the rules of the game are so clear-cut. For better or worse,
however, formal proofs of substantive set-theoretic claims can be hundreds or
even thousands of steps long. In cases where the formal proof is manageable,
we will ask you to formalize it in the exercises. If you want to prove more
results in set theory, we recommend building a library of lemma files so you
can avoid repeating work.
Set theory has a rather complicated and interesting history. Another ob-
jective of this chapter is to give you a feeling for this history. We will start out
with an untutored, or naive notion of set, the one that you were no doubt naive set theory
413
414 / First-order Set Theory
Section 15.1
Naive set theory
The first person to study sets extensively and to appreciate the inconsistencies
lurking in the naive conception was the nineteenth century German mathe-
matician Georg Cantor. According to the naive conception, a set is just a
sets and membership collection of things, like a set of chairs, a set of dominoes, or a set of numbers.
The things in the collection are said to be members of the set. We write a b,
and read a is a member (or an element) of b, if a is one of the objects that
makes up the set b.
There is only one constant symbol in set theory and this is denoted by a
special symbol. We therefore dont need to use the letters at the beginning
Chapter 15
Naive set theory / 415
x a (x a)
To say the same thing using only one kind of variable we would need a pred-
icate, Set(x), true of only sets, and we would have to write
x y [Set(y) x y]
Section 15.1
416 / First-order Set Theory
Notice that this is not just one axiom, but an infinite collection of axioms,
axiom scheme one for each w P (x). For this reason, it is called an axiom scheme. When we
replace P (x) by some specific w then we call the result an instance of the
axiom scheme. We will see later that some instances of this axiom scheme are
inconsistent, so we will have to modify the scheme. But for now we assume
all of its instances as axioms in our theory of sets.
Actually, the Axiom of Comprehension is a bit more general than our no-
tation suggests, since the w P (x) can contain variables other than x, say
universal closure z1 , . . . , zn . What we really want is the universal closure of the displayed for-
mula, where all the other variables are universally quantified:
z1 . . . zn a x [x a P (x)]
Most applications of the axiom will in fact make use of these additional
variables. For example, the claim that for any objects z1 and z2 , there is a set
containing z1 and z2 as its only members, is an instance of this axiom scheme:
z1 z2 a x [x a (x = z1 x = z2 )]
Here the formula P (x) that we are using as an instance is x = z1 x =
z2 , which contains the free variables z1 and z2 . These must be universally
quantified to form an instance of comprehension.
The Axiom of Comprehension, as we have stated it, is weaker than the in-
tuitive principle that motivated it. After all, we have already seen that there
are many determinate properties expressible in English that cannot be ex-
pressed in any particular version of fol. For example, we cant express the
English connective because or the quantifier many in fol. Since there is no
formula of fol capable of expressing properties requiring these connectives,
the axiom does not guarantee that there are sets containing just those objects
that satisfy such properties. These sets are getting left out of our axiomatiza-
tion. Still, the axiom as stated is quite strong. In fact, it is too strong, as we
will soon see.
Chapter 15
Naive set theory / 417
sets a and b have the same elements, then a = b. We can express this in fol
as follows:
Axiom 2. (Axiom of Extensionality)
a b [x (x a x b) a = b]
Proposition 1. For each w P (x) we can prove that there is a unique set of uniqueness theorem
objects that satisfy P (x). Using the notation introduced in Section 14.1:
z1 . . . zn !a x [x a P (x)]
This is our first chance to apply our techniques of informal proof to a claim
in set theory. Our proof might look like this:
x [x a P (x)]
x [x b P (x)]
Section 15.1
418 / First-order Set Theory
x [x a x b]
{x | P (x)}
This is read: the set of x such that P (x). Note that if we had used a dierent
variable, say y rather than x, we would have had dierent notation for
the very same set:
{y | P (y)}
brace notation This brace notation for sets is convenient but inessential. It is not part of
the ocial first-order language of set theory, since it doesnt fit the format of
first-order languages. We will only use it in informal contexts. In any event,
anything that can be said using brace notation can be said in the ocial
language. For example, b {x | P (x)} could be written:
a [x (x a P (x)) b a]
Remember
Naive set theory has the Axiom of Extensionality and the Axiom Scheme
of Comprehension. Comprehension asserts that every first-order formula
determines a set. Extensionality says that sets with the same members
are identical.
Chapter 15
The empty set, singletons and pairs / 419
Exercises
15.1 List three members of the sets defined by the following properties:
. 1. Being a prime number larger than 15.
2. Being one of your ancestors.
3. Being a grammatical sentence of English.
4. Being a prefix of English.
5. Being a palindrome of English, that is, a phrase whose reverse is the very same phrase,
as with Madam, Im Adam.
15.2 In the Fitch file Exercise 15.2, you are asked to give a formal proof of the main step in our
proof of Proposition 1. You should give a complete proof, without using any of the Con rules.
(You will find the symbol on the Fitch toolbar in the tab named Set.)
Write this statement using brace notation. Then write it out in the first-order language of
set theory, without using the brace notation. In both cases you may allow yourself natural
predicates like NatNum, Prime, and Set.
Section 15.2
The empty set, singletons and pairs
{x | x = x}
There is no object that satisfies this property, and so the set is said to be
empty, since it contains nothing. It is easy to prove that there can be at
most one such set, so it is called the empty set, and we use the symbol empty set ()
Section 15.2
420 / First-order Set Theory
to represent it. Some authors use 0 to denote the empty set. It can also be
informally denoted by {}.
When there is one and only one object x satisfying P (x) the Axiom of
Comprehension guarantees there is a set whose only member is that object.
singleton set We call this the singleton set containing x, and denote it by {x}.
Some students are tempted to confuse an object with the singleton set
containing that object. But in that direction lies, if not madness, at least
dreadful confusion. After all, a singleton set is a set (an abstract object) and
its member might have been any object at all, say the Washington Monument.
The Washington Monument is a physical object, not a set. So we must not
confuse an object x with the set {x}. Even if x is a set, we must not confuse
it with its own singleton. For example, a set x might have any number of
elements in it, but {x} has exactly one element: x.
The notation for singleton sets is an example of list notation for sets, which
allows us to just list the elements of the set in braces. We write {3} for the set
that contains only the number 3, {2, 3} for the set that contains just the num-
bers 2 and 3, and {Washington Monument, White House, Lincoln Memorial}
for the set that contains those three landmarks. Like brace notation, list no-
tation is a convenient but dispensible part of the notation that we use for
discussing set theory. The description of a set in list notation is just an ab-
breviation for a longer expression in the ocial language.
Introducing list notation suggests that there are sets with two elements,
three elements, four elements and so on, but before we can be sure of this we
have to justify the existence of any such set using the Axiom of Comprehen-
sion. The next proposition proves the existence of a set containing any two
elements that we choose.
x y !a w (w a (w = x w = y))
a = {w | w = x w = y}
We did not previously prove the existence of singleton sets, but we now
have two ways to show that singleton sets exist. One is to use an instance of
Chapter 15
The empty set, singletons and pairs / 421
Exercises
Section 15.2
422 / First-order Set Theory
15.7 Suppose that a1 and a2 are sets, each of which has only the Washington Monument as a
. member. Prove (informally) that a1 = a2 .
15.8 Give an informal proof that there is only one empty set. (Hint: Use the Axiom of Extensionality.)
.
15.9 Give an informal proof that the set of even primes greater than 10 is equal to the set of even
. primes greater than 100.
15.10 How many elements do the following sets contain?
. 1. {7, 8, 9}
2. {3 + 4, 4 + 4, 5 + 4}
3. {7, 8, 9, 3 + 4}
4. {7, 3 + 4, 5 + 2, 6 + 1}
Section 15.3
Subsets
The next notion is closely related to the membership relation, but fundamen-
tally dierent. It is the subset relation, and is defined as follows:
subset () Definition Given sets a and b, we say that a is a subset of b, written a b,
provided every member of a is also a member of b.
For example, the set of vowels, {a, e, i, o, u}, is a subset of the set of letters
of the alphabet, {a, b, c, . . . , z}, but not vice versa. Similarly, the singleton set
{Washington Monument} is a subset of the set {x | x is taller than 100 feet}.
subset vs. membership It is very important to read the sentences a b and a b carefully.
The first is read a is a member of b or a is an element of b. The latter is
read a is a subset of b. Sometimes it is tempting to read one or the other of
these as a is included in b. However, this is a very bad idea, since the term
included is ambiguous between membership and subset. (If you cant resist
using included, use it only for the subset relation.)
From the point of view of fol, there are two ways to think of our definition
of subset. One is to think of it as saying that the formula a b is an
abbreviation of the following w:
x [x a x b]
Another way is to think of as an additional binary relation symbol in our
language, and to construe the definition as an axiom:
a b [a b x (x a x b)]
Chapter 15
Subsets / 423
It doesnt make much dierence which way you think of it. Dierent people
prefer dierent understandings. The first is probably the most common, since
it keeps the ocial language of set theory pretty sparse.
Lets prove a proposition involving the subset relation that is very obvious,
but worth noting.
Remember
2. a = b i a b and b a.
Section 15.3
424 / First-order Set Theory
Exercises
15.12 Give an informal proof of the following simple theorem: For every set a, a.
.
15.13 Give an formal proof of the following simple theorem: For every set a, a.
15.14 In the file Exercise 15.14, you are asked to give a formal proof of Proposition 4 from the
definition of the subset relation. The proof is very easy, so you should not use any of the Con
rules. (You will find the symbol if you choose the Set tab in the Fitch toolbar.)
15.15 In the file Exercise 15.15, you are asked to give a formal proof of Proposition 5 from the Axiom
of Extensionality, the definition of subset, and Proposition 4. The proof is a bit more complex,
so you may use Taut Con if you like.
15.16 Give a formal proof that the subset relation is transitive, that is, that
x y z ((x y y z) x z)
15.17
Proposition 4 tells us that every set is a subset of itself. Sometimes we are interested in just
.
those subsets of a set that are not equal to the set. We can define these proper subsets using
the formula x y (x y (x y x = y)). Give an informal proof of
x y (x y y x)
Section 15.4
Intersection and union
There are two important operations on sets that you have probably seen
before: intersection and union. These operations take two sets and form a
third.
Chapter 15
Intersection and union / 425
1. The intersection of a and b is the set whose members are just those intersection ()
objects in both a and b. This set is generally written a b. (a b is a
complex term built up using a binary function symbol placed in infix
notation.2 ) In symbols:
a b z (z a b (z a z b))
2. The union of a and b is the set whose members are just those objects in union ()
either a or b or both. This set is generally written a b. In symbols:
a b z (z a b (z a z b))
At first sight, these definitions seem no more problematic than the defini-
tion of the subset relation. But if you think about it, you will see that there
is actually something a bit fishy about them as they stand. For how do we
know that there are sets of the kind described? For example, even if we know
that a and b are sets, how do we know that there is a set whose members
are the objects in both a and b? And how do we know that there is exactly
one such set? Remember the rules of the road. We have to prove everything
from explicitly given axioms. Can we prove, based on our axioms, that there
is such a unique set?
It turns out that we can, at least with the naive axioms. But later, we
will have to modify the Axiom of Comprehension to avoid inconsistencies.
The modified form of this axiom will allow us to justify only one of these two
operations. To justify the union operation, we will need a new axiom. But we
will get to that in good time.
Proposition 6. (Intersection) For any pair of sets a and b there is one and existence and
only one set c whose members are the objects in both a and b. In symbols: uniqueness of a b
a b !c x (x c (x a x b))
Section 15.4
426 / First-order Set Theory
We can make this same point using our brace notation. Proposition 1
guarantees a unique set {x | P (x)} for any formula P (x), and we are simply
noting that the intersection of sets a and b is the set c = {x | x a x b}.
The union operation is very similar to intersection, except that it forms
the set of objects that are in either of its argument sets, not both as for
intersection.
existence and Proposition 7. (Union) For any pair of sets a and b there is one and only
uniqueness of a b one set c whose members are the objects in either a or b or both. In symbols:
a b !c x (x c (x a x b))
Proof of 8.1: This follows quite easily from the definition of inter-
section and the Axiom of Extensionality. To show that a b = b a,
we need only show that a b and b a have the same members. By
the definition of intersection, the members of a b are the things
that are in both a and b, whereas the members of b a are the things
that are in both b and a. These are clearly the same things. We will
look at a formal proof of this in the next You try it section.
Chapter 15
Intersection and union / 427
Proof of 8.3: Since (8.3) is the most interesting, we prove it. Let a
and b be arbitrary sets. We need to prove a b = b i b a. To prove
this, we give two conditional proofs. First, assume a b = b. We need
to prove that b a. But this means x(x b x a), so we will
use the method of general conditional proof. Let x be an arbitrary
member of b. We need to show that x a. But since b = a b, we see
that x a b. Thus x a x b by the definition of intersection.
Then it follows, of course, that x a, as desired.
Now lets prove the other half of the biconditional. Thus, assume that
b a and let us prove that a b = b. By Proposition 5, it suces to
prove a b b and b a b. The first of these is easy, and does not
even use our assumption. So lets prove the second, that b a b.
That is, we must prove that x(x b x (a b)). This is proven
by general conditional proof. Thus, let x be an arbitrary member of
b. We need to prove that x a b. But by our assumption, b a,
so x a. Hence, x a b, as desired.
You try it
................................................................
1. Open the Fitch file Intersection 1. Here we have given a complete formal
proof of Proposition 8.1 from the definition of intersection and the Axiom
of Extensionality. (We have written int(x, y) for x y.) We havent
specified the rules or support steps in the proof, so this is what you need to
do. This is the first formal proof weve given using function symbols. The
appearance of complex terms makes it a little harder to spot the instances
of the quantifier rules.
2. Specify the rules and support steps for each step except the next to last
(i.e., step 22). The heart of the proof is really the steps in which c ac b
is commuted to c b c a, and vice versa.
4. When you have a completed proof specifying all rules and supports, save
it as Proof Intersection 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Section 15.4
428 / First-order Set Theory
1. x b c if and only if x b x c
2. x b c if and only if x b x c
Exercises
15.18 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Intersection 1.
15.19 Let a = {2, 3, 4, 5}, b = {2, 4, 6, 8}, and c = {3, 5, 7, 9}. Compute the following and express your
. answer in list notation.
1. a b
2. b a
3. a b
4. b c
5. b c
6. (a b) c
7. a (b c)
15.20 Give an informal proof of Proposi- 15.21 Use Fitch to give a formal proof of
. tion 8.2. Proposition 8.2. You will find the prob-
lem set up in the file Exercise 15.21. You
may use Taut Con, since a completely
formal proof would be quite tedious.
15.22 Give an informal proof of Proposi- 15.23 Use Fitch to give a formal proof of
. tion 8.4. Proposition 8.4. You will find the prob-
lem set up in the file Exercise 15.23. You
may use Taut Con in your proof.
15.24 Give an informal proof of Proposi- 15.25 Give an informal proof of Proposi-
. tion 8.5. . tion 8.6.
Chapter 15
Ordered Pairs / 429
15.26 Give an informal proof that for every set a there is a unique set c such that for all x, x c
. i x a. This set c is called the absolute complement of a, and is denoted by a. (This result
will not follow from the axioms we eventually adopt. In fact, it will follow that no set has
an absolute complement.) If you were to formalize this proof, what instance of the Axiom of
Comprehension would you need? Write it out explicitly.
Section 15.5
Ordered Pairs
{x, y | x2 + y 2 = 1}
But sets themselves are unordered. For example {1, 0} = {0, 1} by Extension-
ality. So how are we to represent ordered pairs and other ordered objects?
What we need is some way of modeling ordered pairs that allows us to
prove the following:
x, y = u, v (x = u y = v)
If we can prove that this holds of our representation of ordered pairs, then we
know that the representation allows us to determine which is the first element
of the ordered pair and which is the second.
It turns out that there are many ways to do this. The simplest and most
widely used is to model the ordered pair x, y by means of the unlikely set
{{x}, {x, y}}.
Definition For any objects x and y, we take the ordered pair x, y to be the ordered pair
set {{x}, {x, y}}. In symbols:
Later, we will ask you to prove that the fundamental property of ordered
pairs displayed above holds when we represent them this way. Here we simply
point out that the set {{x}, {x, y}} exists and is unique, using Propositions 2
and 3.
Section 15.5
430 / First-order Set Theory
Notice that there is something about this set that we have not encountered
explicitly before, namely that an ordered pair is a set whose members are
themselves sets: it is a set of sets. There is nothing mysterious about this fact;
it follows directly from the fact that the axiom of comprehension is stated
very generally. The range of the quantifier x in the axiom is the entire domain
of naive set theory, which certainly contains all of the sets, in addition to any
other objects that might exist.
Once we have figured out how to represent ordered pairs, the way is open
for us to represent ordered triples, quadruples, etc. For example, we will repre-
ordered n-tuples sent the ordered triple x, y, z as x, y, z. More generally, we will represent
ordered n-tuples as x1 , x2 , . . . xn .
By the way, as with brace notation for sets, the ordered pair notation
x, y is not part of the ocial language of set theory. It can be eliminated
from formulas without diculty, though the formulas get rather long.
Exercises
15.27 Using propositions 2 and 3, let a = {2, 3} and let b = {a}. How many members does a have?
. How many members does b have? Does a = b? That is, is {2, 3} = {{2, 3}}?
15.28 How many sets are members of the set described below?
.
{{}, {{}, 3, {}}, {}}
[Hint: First rewrite this using as a notation for the empty set. Then delete from each
description of a set any redundancies.]
15.29 Apply the Unordered Pair theorem (Proposition 2) to x = y = . What set is obtained? Call
. this set c. Now apply the theorem to x = , y = c. Do you obtain the same set or a dierent
set?
15.30 This exercise and the one to follow lead you through the basic properties of ordered pairs.
. 1. How many members does the set {{x}, {x, y}} contain if x = y? How many if x = y?
2. Recall that we defined x, y = {{x}, {x, y}}. How do we know that for any x and y
there is a unique set x, y?
3. Give an informal proof that the easy half of the fundamental property of ordered pairs
holds with this definition:
(x = u y = v) x, y = u, v
Chapter 15
Modeling relations in set theory / 431
x, y = u, v (x = u y = v)
15.31 Building on Problem 15.30, prove that for any two sets a and b, there is a set of all ordered
. pairs x, y such that x a and y b. This set is called the Cartesian Product of a and b, and
is denoted by a b.
15.32 Suppose that a has three elements and b has five. What can you say about the size of a b,
. a b, and a b? (a b is defined in Exercise 15.31.) [Hint: in some of these cases, all you can
do is give upper and lower bounds on the size of the resulting set. In other words, youll have
to say the set contains at least such and such members and at most so and so.]
Section 15.6
Modeling relations in set theory
Suppose we are talking about some domain D of objects, for instance a set of
blocks from Tarskis World. Intuitively, we use unary predicates like Tet and
Small to express properties of these blocks. How might we model the properties
expressed by these predicates? The subsets of D defined by the predicates,
{x | x D and x is a tetrahedron}
{x | x D and x is small}
are not themselves properties, but they are the closest representatives that
we have in set theory. We call these sets the extension (in domain D) of the
corresponding property, and use them to model the properties expressed by
the unary predicates in that domain.
Similarly, a binary predicate like Larger expresses a binary relation between
objects in domain D. In set theory, we model this relation by means of a set
of ordered pairs, specifically the set
This set is called the extension (in domain D) of the predicate or relation. extension
More generally, given some set D, we call any set of pairs x, y, where x and
y are in D, a binary relation on D. We model ternary relations similarly, as relation in set theory
sets of ordered triples, and so forth for higher arities.
Section 15.6
432 / First-order Set Theory
Reflexivity: x R(x, x)
Irreflexivity: x R(x, x)
Symmetry: x y (R(x, y) R(y, x))
Asymmetry: x y (R(x, y) R(y, x))
Antisymmetry: x y [(R(x, y) R(y, x)) x = y]
R(a, b)
R(b, c)
R(a, c)
Chapter 15
Modeling relations in set theory / 433
x R(x, x)
Inverse relations
In our discussion of the logic of atomic sentences in Section 2.2, we noted that
some of the logical relations between atomic sentences stem from the fact that
one relation is the inverse of another (page 52). Examples were right of and
left of, larger and smaller, and less than and greater than. We can now see
what being inverses of one another says about the extensions of such pairs of
predicates.
Given any set-theoretic binary relation R on a set D, the inverse (some- inverse or converse
times called the converse) of that relation is the relation R1 defined by
R1 = {x, y | y, x R}
Thus, for example, the extension of smaller in some domain is always the
inverse of the extension of larger. In an exercise, we ask you to prove some
simple properties of inverse relations, including one showing that if S is the
inverse of R, then R is the inverse of S.
Section 15.6
434 / First-order Set Theory
say among shirts in a store, we can talk about all the shirts of a particular size,
say small, medium, and large, and even group them onto three appropriate
racks.
We can model this grouping process very nicely in set theory with an im-
portant construction known as equivalence classes. This construction is widely
used in mathematics and will be needed in our proof of the Completeness The-
orem for the formal proof system F.
Given any equivalence relation R on a set D, we can group together the
objects that are deemed equivalent by means of R. Specifically, for each x D,
let [x]R be the set
{y D | x, y R}
In words, [x]R is the set of things equivalent to x with respect to the relation
equivalence classes R. It is called the equivalence class of x. (If x is a small shirt, then think
of [x]SameSize as the stores small rack.) The fact that this grouping opera-
tion behaves the way we would hope and expect is captured by the following
proposition. (We typically omit writing the subscript R from [x]R when it is
clear from context, as in the following proposition.)
Proof: (1) follows from the fact that R is reflexive on D. (2) is more
substantive. Suppose that [x] = [y]. By (1), y [y], so y [x]. But
then by the definition of [x], x, y R. For the converse, suppose
that x, y R. We need to show that [x] = [y]. To do this, it suces
to prove that [x] [y] and [y] [x]. We prove the first, the second
being entirely similar. Let z [x]. We need to show that z [y]. Since
z [x], x, z R. From the fact that x, y R, using symmetry,
we obtain y, x R. By transitivity, from y, x R and x, z R
we obtain y, z R. But then z [y], as desired. The proof of (3)
is similar and is left as an exercise.
Chapter 15
Modeling relations in set theory / 435
Exercises
15.33 Open the Fitch file Exercise 15.33. This file contains as goals the sentences expressing that the
same shape relation is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive (and hence an equivalence relation).
You can check that each of these sentences can be proven outright with a single application
of Ana Con. However, in this exercise we ask you to prove this applying Ana Con only to
atomic sentences. Thus, the exercise is to show how these sentences follow from the meaning
of the basic predicate, using just the quantifier rules and propositional logic.
For the next six exercises, we define relations R and S so that R(a, b) holds if either a or b is a
tetrahedron, and a is in the same row as b, whereas S(a, b) holds if both a and b are tetrahedra, and in
the same row. The exercises ask you to decide whether R or S has various of the properties we have been
studying. If it does, open the appropriate Fitch exercise file and submit a proof. If it does not, submit
a world that provides a counterexample. Thus, for example, when we ask whether R is reflexive, you
should create a world in which there is an object that does not bear R to itself, since R is not in fact
reflexive. In cases where you give a proof, you may use Ana Con applied to literals.
15.41 Use Tarskis World to open the file Venns World. Write out the extension of the same column
. relation in this world. (It contains eight ordered pairs.) Then write out the extension of the
between relation in this world. (This will be a set of ordered triples.) Finally, what is the
extension of the adjoins relation in this world? Turn in your answers.
15.42 Describe a valid inference scheme (similar to the one displayed on page 432) that goes with
. each of the following properties of binary relations: symmetry, antisymmetry, asymmetry, and
irreflexivity.
Section 15.6
436 / First-order Set Theory
15.43 What are the inverses of the following binary relations: older than, as tall as, sibling of, father
. of, and ancestor of ?
15.44 Give informal proofs of the following simple facts about inverse relations.
. 1. R is symmetric i R = R1 .
2. For any relation R, (R1 )1 = R.
15.45 Use Tarskis World to open the file Venns World. Write out equivalence classes that go with
. each of the following equivalence relations: same shape, same size, same row, and identity.
You can write the equivalence classes using list notation. For example, one of the same shape
equivalence classes is {a, e}.
Explain how Proposition 1 can be used to show that the set displayed on the right side of this
equation exists.
15.47 (Partitions and equivalence relations) Let D be some set and let P be some set of non-empty
. subsets of D with the property that every element of D is in exactly one member of P. Such a
set is said to be a partition of D. Define a relation E on D by: a, b E i there is an X P
such that a X and b X. Show that E is an equivalence relation and that P is the set of its
equivalence classes.
15.48 If a and b are subsets of D, then the Cartesian product (defined in Exercise 15.31) a b is a
. binary relation on D. Which of the properties of relations discussed in this section does this
relation have? (As an example, you will discover that a b is irreflexive if and only if a b = .)
Your answer should show that in the case where a = b = D, a b is an equivalence relation.
How many equivalence classes does it have?
Section 15.7
Functions
The notion of a function is one of the most important in mathematics. We
have already discussed functions to some extent in Section 1.5.
Intuitively, a function is simply a way of doing things to things or assign-
ing things to things: assigning license numbers to cars, assigning grades to
Chapter 15
Functions / 437
Functional: x 1 y R(x, y)
In other words, a relation is a function if for any input there is at most one
output. If the function also has the following property, then it is called a
total function on D: total functions
Totality: x y R(x, y)
Total functions give answers for every object in the domain. If a function
is not total on D, it is called a partial function on D.3 partial functions
Whether or not a function is total or partial depends very much on just
what the domain D of discourse is. If D is the set of all people living or dead,
then intuitively the father of function is total, though admittedly things get a
bit hazy at the dawn of humankind. But if D is the set of living people, then
this function is definitely partial. It only assigns a value to a person whose
father is still living.
There are some standard notational conventions used with functions. First,
it is standard to use letters like f, g, h and so forth to range over functions.
Second, it is common practice to write f (x) = y rather than x, y f when f (x)
f is a function.
The domain of a function f is the set domain of function
Section 15.7
438 / First-order Set Theory
Exercises
15.50 Use Tarskis World to open the file Venns World. List the ordered pairs in the frontmost (fm)
. function described in Section 1.5 (page 33). Is the function total or partial? What is its range?
15.51 Which of the following sets represent functions on the set D = {1, 2, 3, 4}? For those which are
. functions, pick out their domain and range.
1. {1, 3, 2, 4, 3, 3}
2. {1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 1}
3. {1, 2, 1, 3, 3, 4, 4, 1}
4. {1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4}
5.
15.52 What is the domain and range of the square root function on the set N = {0, 1, 2, . . .} of all
. natural numbers?
15.53 Open the Fitch file Exercise 15.53. The premise here defines R to be the frontmost relation.
The goal of the exercise is to prove that this relation is functional. You may use Taut Con as
well as Ana Con applied to literals.
A function f is said to be injective or one-to-one if it always assigns dierent values to dierent objects
in its domain. In symbols, if f (x) = f (y) then x = y for all x, y in the domain of f .
15.54 Which of the following functions are one-to-one: father of, student id number of, frontmost, and
. fingerprint of ? (You may need to decide just what the domain of the function should be before
deciding whether the function is injective. For frontmost, take the domain to be Venns World.)
Chapter 15
The powerset of a set / 439
15.55 Let f (x) = 2x for any natural number x. What is the domain of this function? What is its
. range? Is the function one-to-one?
15.56 Let f (x) = x2 for any natural number x. What is the domain of this function? What is its
. range? Is the function one-to-one? How does your answer change if we take the domain to
consist of all the integers, both positive and negative?
15.57 Let E be an equivalence relation on a set D. Consider the relation R that holds between any
. x in D and its equivalence class [x]E . Is this a function? If so, what is its domain? What is its
range? Under what conditions is it an one-to-one function?
Section 15.8
The powerset of a set
Once we get used to the idea that sets can be members of other sets, it is
natural to form the set of all subsets of any given set b. The following theorem,
which is easy to prove, shows that there is one and only one such set. This
set is called the powerset of b and denoted b or (b). powersets ()
Proposition 10. (Powersets) For any set b there is a unique set whose mem-
bers are just the subsets of b. In symbols:
b c x (x c x b)
By way of example, let us form the powerset of the set b = {2, 3}. Thus,
we need a set whose members are all the subsets of b. There are four of these.
The most obvious two are the singletons {2} and {3}. The other two are the
empty set, which is a subset of every set, as we saw in Problem 15.12, and the
set b itself, since every set is a subset of itself. Thus:
Here are some facts about the powerset operation. We will ask you to prove
them in the exercises.
1. b b
Section 15.8
440 / First-order Set Theory
2. b
3. a b i a b
It is possible for a set to have some of its own subsets as elements. For
example, any set that has the empty set as an element has a subset as an
element, since the empty set is a subset of every set. To take another example,
the set
{Washington Monument}
However, it turns out that no set can have all of its subsets as elements.
This theorem applies to both finite and infinite sets. The proof shows how
to take any set b and find a set c which is a subset of b but not a member of b,
namely the set c = {x | x b and x x}. This is sometimes called the Russell
Russell set for b set for b, after Bertrand Russell. So what we have proved in the preceding can
be restated as:
Chapter 15
The powerset of a set / 441
Proposition 13. For any set b, the Russell set for b, the set
{x | x b x x},
is a subset of b but not a member of b.
This result is, as we will see, a very important result, one that immediately
implies Proposition 12.
Lets compute the Russell set for a few sets. If b = {0, 1}, then the Russell
set for b is just b itself. If b = {0, {0, {0, . . . }}} then the Russell set for b is just
{0} since b b. Finally, if b = {Washington Monument}, then the Russell set
for b is just b itself.
Remember
b = {a | a b}
Exercises
15.58 Compute {2, 3, 4}. Your answer should 15.59 Compute {2, 3, 4, 5}.
. have eight distinct elements. .
15.60 Compute {2}. 15.61 Compute .
. .
15.62 Compute {2, 3}. 15.63 Prove the results stated in Proposi-
. . tion 11.
15.64 Here are a number of conjectures you might make. Some are true, but some are false. Prove
. the true ones, and find examples to show that the others are false.
1. For any set b, b.
2. For any set b, b b.
3. For any sets a and b, (a b) = a b.
4. For any sets a and b, (a b) = a b.
15.65 What is the Russell set for each of the following sets?
. 1. {}
2. A set a satisfying a = {a}
3. A set {1, a} where a = {a}
4. The set of all sets
Section 15.8
442 / First-order Set Theory
Section 15.9
Russells Paradox
universal set (V ) The set c used in the above proof is called the universal set and is usually
denoted by V . It is called that because it contains everything as a mem-
ber, including itself. What we have in fact shown is that the powerset of the
universal set both is and is not a subset of the universal set.
Let us look at our contradiction a bit more closely. Our proof of Propo-
sition 12, applied to the special case of the universal set, gives rise to the
set
Z = {x | x V x x}
This is just the Russell set for the universal set. But proposition 13 tells us
that for any set a, the Russell set for a is not a member of a. So the Russell
set for V is not a member of V , which is a contradiction because everything
is in V .
This set Z is called the (absolute) Russell set, and the contradiction we
Russells Paradox have just established is called Russells Paradox.
It would be hard to overdramatize the impact the discovery of Russells
Paradox had on set theory at the turn of the century. Simple as it is, it shook
the subject to its foundations. It is just as if in arithmetic we discovered a
proof that 23+27=50 and 23+27= 50. Or as if in geometry we could prove
that the area of a square both is and is not the square of the side. But here
we are in just that position. This shows that there is something wrong with
our starting assumptions of the whole theory, the two axioms with which we
began. There simply is no domain of sets which satisfies these assumptions.
This discovery was regarded as a paradox just because it had earlier seemed to
most mathematicians that the intuitive universe of sets did satisfy the axioms.
reactions to the paradox Russells Paradox is just the tip of an iceberg of problematic results in
naive set theory. These paradoxes resulted in a wide-ranging attempt to clarify
Chapter 15
Russells Paradox / 443
Remember
Z = {x | x x}
and showing that the assumption Z Z and its negation each entails the
other.
Exercises
15.66
In the file Exercise 15.66, you are asked to give a formal proof of from the single premise
Section 15.9
444 / First-order Set Theory
Section 15.10
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc)
The paradoxes of naive set theory show us that our intuitive notion of set is
simply inconsistent. We must go back and rethink the assumptions on which
the theory rests. However, in doing this rethinking, we do not want to throw
out the baby with the bath water. Set theory has proved so valuable as a useful
toolkit for mathematicians that we would like to develop a new set theory in
which all of the previous results, except for the proof of inconsistency, are
diagnosing the problem provable.
If we examine the Russell Paradox closely, we see that it is actually a
straightforward refutation of the Axiom of Comprehension. It shows that there
is no set determined by the property of not belonging to itself. That is, the
following is, on the one hand, a logical truth, but also the negation of an
instance of Comprehension:
c x (x c x x)
This is just the above sentence with E(x, y) used instead of x y. The
proof shows that the sentence is actually a first-order validity; its validity does
not depend on anything about the meaning of . It follows that no coherent
conception of set can countenance the Russell set.
But why is there no such set? It is not enough to say that the set leads
us to a contradiction. We would like to understand why this is so. Various
answers have been proposed to this question.
Cumulative sets
One popular view is the cumulation metaphor due to the logician Ernst
Zermelo. Zermelos idea is that sets should be thought of as formed by abstract
acts of collecting together previously given objects. We start with some basic
objects. We collect sets of these objects. Then we collet sets whose members
are the objects and earlier sets, and so on and on. Before one can form a set
by this abstract act of collecting, one must already have all of its members,
Zermelo suggested.
Chapter 15
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc) / 445
On this conception, sets come in distinct, discrete stages, each set arising
at the first stage after the stages where all of its members arise. For example,
if set x arises as stage 17 and set y at stage 37, then a = {x, y} would arise
at stage 38. If b is constructed at some stage, then its powerset b will be
constructed at the next stage. Each stage gives rise to sets that can be used
to form new sets at a later stage. Once a set has been formed, we can always
create a new stage by forming its power set and so there is no last stage of this
process. On Zermelos conception, the reason there can never be a universal
set is that as any set b arises, there is always its powerset to be formed later,
and so there is no stage at which the universal set V can appear. In this sense,
V is too big to be a set.
The most common form of modern set theory is Zermelo-Frankel set the- Zermelo-Frankel set
ory, also known as zfc. The axioms of zfc capture this cumulative idea of theory zfc
sets. The axioms allow us to prove the existence of a basic collection of sets,
those that exist at stage 1, and additional axioms permit us to collect together
sets of objects from one stage to form the members of the next stage.
In zfc, it is generally assumed that we are dealing with pure sets, that
is, there is nothing but sets in the domain of discourse. The only basic object
with which we start our collection operations is the empty set, and its
existence must be justified by an axiom. If we want to speak about numbers
or any other objects in zfc, we must build models of them within the theory.
For example, in zfc, we could model 0 by the empty set, 1 by {}, 2 by {{}},
and so on.
Here is a list of the axioms of zfc. axioms of zfc
1. Axiom of Extensionality:
a b (x (x a x b) a = b)
The dierence between these two is that the first only addresses the
identity of sets, while the second addresses the identity of everything in
the domain of discourse. Note in particular that the second version im-
plies that there is at most one thing in the domain that has no members
Section 15.10
446 / First-order Set Theory
(which would be the empty set). We will continue to state the remain-
ing axioms in our many-sorted language, since it makes them easier to
understand.
2. Axiom of Separation:
z1 . . . zn a b x [x b (x a P (x))]
3. Unordered Pair Axiom: For any two objects there is a set that has
both as elements (and no others).
x y a z (z a (z = x z = y))
Chapter 15
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc) / 447
set that contains this object, whatever it is. From this set, we can use
the Axiom of Separation to derive the existence of the empty set as the
subset of this set whose elements satisfy x = x.
4. Union Axiom: Given any set a of sets, the union of all the members
of a is also a set. That is:
a b x [x b c (c a x c)]
a b x (x b x a)
6. Axiom of Infinity: There is a set containing the empty set and which
contains {a} for every a that it contains.
a ( a x (x a {x} a)
The set whose existence is guaranteed by this axiom has as many el-
ements as there are natural numbers. We can think of the set as
representing the number 0, {} as representing 1, {{}} as representing
2 and so on. In general. the singleton set containing the representation
of a number is the representation of the next number.
Section 15.10
448 / First-order Set Theory
The next two axioms use functions to construct new sets out of existing
sets.
7. Axiom of Replacement: Suppose that you have a formula P (x, y)
which holds of exactly one y for each x in a set a, that is:
x (x a !y P (x, y))
Then, there is a set
{y | x (x a P (x, y))}
The Axiom of Replacement tells us that if we have a set and a formula
which relates each element of the set to a unique object, then the col-
lection of those objects is also a set. This axiom is actually a schema,
since P (x, y) can be any formula with the required uniqueness property,
and each such formula defines a set.
8. Axiom of Choice: Suppose a is a set whose members are all non-empty
sets. Then there is a function f whose domain is a and which satisfies
the following:
x (x a f (x) x)
The idea here is that the function f looks at each set in a and chooses
exactly one member of that set sort of like Max picking his favorite
book from each shelf in the bookcase. The function f is called a choice
function for a. The Axiom of Choice guarantees the existence of f and,
thanks to Replacement, of the set that forms the range of f :
{f (x) | x a}
Chapter 15
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc) / 449
b [b = y (y b y b = )]
All of the preceding axioms tell us what sets must exist in our set the-
oretic universe. The Axiom of Regularity is dierent because it tells us
that certain sets cannot exist. Specifically, this axiom rules out the pos-
sibility of irregular sets, such as a set which contains itself as its only
member. We might write this set as S = {S}, or as {{{. . .}}}. Your
mind might recoil at the thought of such sets, and that is because such
sets cannot exist on the cumulative conception of sets. For any set to
exist its members must already be formed at a previous stage, and since
this sets only member is itself, it couldnt possibly arise at any stage in
the cumulative hierarchy.
More generally, let us see why, on the cumulative conception, the Axiom regularity and
of Regularity is true. That is, let us prove that on this conception, no cumulation
set has a nonempty intersection with each of its own elements.
The axioms of zfc that we have so far discussed do not imply the ex-
istence, or the non-existence, of irregular sets. There are set theories
in which all of the preceding axioms of zfc are true and irregular sets
exist, and others in which the preceding axioms of zfc are true and
in which no irregular sets exist. If we want to explicitly enforce Zer-
melos cumulative conception of sets, then we must adopt the Axiom of
Regularity.
One of the reasons the Axiom of Regularity is assumed is that it gives
us a powerful method for proving theorems about sets by induction.
We discuss various forms of proof by induction in the next chapter.
The Axiom of Regularity is sometimes called the Axiom of Foundation
Section 15.10
450 / First-order Set Theory
You should examine the axioms of zfc in turn to see if you think they
hold on Zermelos conception of set.
One view of the problem caused by considering the collection of all objects
to be a set is that this collection is just too big to be a completed totality.
As we have seen, the universal set V cannot appear at any stage of Zermelos
cumulative hierarchy of sets. But this is a slightly dierent objection to con-
sidering V to be a set, an objection that is due to John von Neumann.
If V is too big, then exactly how big does a collection have to get to be
too big to be considered a set? Some philosophers have suggested that the
powerset of an infinite set might be too large to be considered as a completed
totality, and this has led to concern that the Powerset Axiom is not justified
on this conception of set. To see why, let us start by thinking about the size
sizes of powersets of the powerset of finite sets.
We have seen that if we start with a set b of size n, then its powerset
b has 2n members. For example, if b has five members, then its power set
has 25 = 32 members. But if b has 1000 members, then its power set has
21000 members, an incredibly large number indeed; larger, they say, than the
number of atoms in the universe. And then we could form the powerset of
that, and the powerset of that gargantuan sets indeed.
But what happens if b is infinite? To address this question, we first have to
sizes of infinite sets figure out what exactly we mean by the size of an infinite set. Cantor answered
this question by giving a rigorous analysis of size that applies to all sets, finite
|b| and infinite. For any set b, the Cantorian size of b is denoted | b |. Informally,
| b |=| c | just in case the members of b and the members of c can be associated
with one another in a unique fashion. More precisely, what is required is that
there be a one-to-one function with domain b and range c. (The notion of a
one-to-one function was defined in Exercise 15.54.)
For finite sets, | b | behaves just as one would expect. This notion of size is
somewhat subtle when it comes to infinite sets, though. It turns out that for
infinite sets, a set can have the same size as some of its proper subsets.5 The
set N of all natural numbers, for example, has the same size as the set E of
even numbers; that is | N | = | E |. The main idea of the proof is contained in
5 Recall from Exercise 15.17 that a proper subset is a subset which is not equal to the
set, in other words it leaves out at least one member of the set.
Chapter 15
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc) / 451
Remember
1. Modern set theory replaces the naive concept of set, which is incon-
sistent, with a concept of set as a collection that is not too large.
2. These collections are seen as arising in stages, where a set arises only
after all its members are present.
Section 15.10
452 / First-order Set Theory
Exercises
15.67 Try to derive the existence of the absolute Russell set from the Axiom of Separation. Where
. does the proof break down?
15.68 Verify our claim that all of Propositions 213 are provable using the axioms of zfc. (Some of
. the proofs are trivial in that the theorems were thrown in as axioms. Others are not trivial.)
15.69 (Cantors Theorem) Show that for any set b whatsoever, | b | = | b | . [Hint: Suppose that f is
. a function mapping b one-to-one into b and then modify the proof of Proposition 12.]
15.71 Prove that the Axiom of Separation and Extensionality are consistent. That is, find a universe
. of discourse in which both are clearly true. [Hint: consider the domain whose only element is
the empty set.]
15.72 Show that the theorem about the existence of ab can be proven using the Axiom of Separation,
. but that the theorem about the existence of a b cannot be so proven. [Come up with a domain
of sets in which the separation axiom is true but the theorem in question is false.]
15.73 (The Union Axiom and ) Exercise 15.72 shows us that we cannot prove the existence of a b
. from the Axiom of Separation. However, the Union Axiom of zfc is stronger than this. It says
not just that a b exists, but that the union of any set of sets exists.
1. Show how to prove the existence of a b from the Union Axiom. What other axioms
of zfc do you need to use?
2. Apply the Union Axiom to show that there is no set of all singletons. [Hint: Use proof
by contradiction and the fact that there is no universal set.]
15.74 Prove in zfc that for any two sets a and b, the Cartesian product a b exists. The proof you
. gave in an earlier exercise will probably not work here, but the result is provable.
15.75 While and have set-theoretic counterparts in and , there is no absolute counterpart
. to .
1. Use the axioms of zfc to prove that no set has an absolute complement.
2. In practice, when using set theory, this negative result is not a serious problem. We
usually work relative to some domain of discourse, and form relative complements.
Justify this by showing, within zfc, that for any sets a and b, there is a set c = {x |
x a x b}. This is called the relative complement of b with respect to a.
Chapter 15
Zermelo Frankel set theory (zfc) / 453
15.76 Assume the Axiom of Regularity. Show that no set is a member of itself. Conclude that, if we
. assume Regularity, then for any set b, the Russell set for b is simply b itself.
There are alternatives to the Axiom of Regularity which have been explored in recent years.
We mention our own favorite, the axiom afa, due to Peter Aczel and others. The name afa
stands for anti-foundation axiom. Using afa you can prove that a great many sets exist with
properties that contradict the Axiom of Regularity. We wrote a book, The Liar, in which we
used afa to model and analyze the so-called Liars Paradox (see Exercise 19.32, page 571).
Section 15.10
Chapter 16
Mathematical Induction
In the first two parts of this book, we covered most of the important methods
of proof used in rigorous reasoning. But we left out one extremely important
method: proof by mathematical induction.
By and large, the methods of proof discussed earlier line up fairly nicely
with various connectives and quantifiers, in the sense that you can often tell
from the syntactic form of your premises or conclusion what methods you
will be using. The most obvious exception is proof by contradiction, or its
formal counterpart Intro. This method can in principle be used to prove
any form of statement, no matter what its main connective or quantifier. This
is because any sentence S is logically equivalent to one that begins with a
negation symbol, namely, S.
form of statements In terms of syntactic form, mathematical induction is typically used to
proved by induction prove statements of the form
x [P(x) Q(x)]
This is also the form of statements proved using general conditional proof.
In fact, proof by induction is really a pumped-up version of this method:
general conditional proof on steroids, you might say. It works when these
statements involve a predicate P(x) defined in a special way. Specifically, proof
by induction is available when the predicate P(x) is defined by what is called an
inductive definition inductive definition. For this reason, we need to discuss proof by induction and
inductive definitions side by side. We will see that whenever a predicate P(x)
is defined by means of an inductive definition, proof by induction provides a
much more powerful method of proof than ordinary general conditional proof.
Before we can discuss either of these, though, we should distinguish both
induction in science from yet a third process that is also known as induction. In science, we use
the term induction whenever we draw a general conclusion on the basis of a
finite number of observations. For example, every day we observe that the sun
comes up, that dropped things fall down, and that people smile more when
it is sunny. We come to infer that this is always the case: that the sun comes
up every morning, that dropped things always fall, that people are always
happier when the sun is out.
Of course there is no strict logical justification for such inferences. We may
have correctly inferred some general law of nature, or we may have simply ob-
served a bunch of facts without any law that backs them up. Some time in
454
Inductive definitions and inductive proofs / 455
the future, people may be happier if it rains, for example after a long drought.
Induction, in this sense, does not guarantee that the conclusion follows neces-
sarily from the premises. It is not a deductively valid form of inference, since
it is logically possible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false.
This is all by way of contrast with mathematical induction, where we can vs. mathematical
justify a general conclusion, with infinitely many instances, on the basis of a induction
finite proof. How is this possible? The key lies in the inductive definitions that
underwrite this method of proof. Induction, in our sense, is a logically valid
method of proof, as certain as any we have studied so far.
Usually, discussions of mathematical induction start (and end) with in-
duction on the natural numbers, to prove statements of the form
x [NatNum(x) Q(x)]
We will start with other examples, examples which show that mathematical
induction applies much more widely than just to natural numbers. The reason
it applies to natural numbers is simply that the natural numbers can be
specified by means of an inductive definition. But so can many other things.
Section 16.1
Inductive definitions and inductive proofs
Inductive definitions involve setting things up in a certain methodical, step-
by-step manner. Proofs by induction take advantage of the structure that
results from such inductive definitions. We begin with a simple analogy.
Dominoes
When they were younger, Claire and Max liked to build long chains of domi-
noes, all around the house. Then they would knock down the first and, if
things were set up right, the rest would all fall down. Little did they know
that in so doing they were practicing induction. Setting up the dominoes is
like giving an inductive definition. Knocking them all down is like proving a
theorem by induction.
There are two things required to make all the dominoes fall over. They
must be close enough together that when any one domino falls, it knocks down
the next. And then, of course, you need to knock down the first. In a proof by
induction, these two steps correspond to what are called the inductive step
(getting from one to the next) and the basis step (getting the whole thing
started).
Section 16.1
456 / Mathematical Induction
Notice that there is no need to have just one domino following each domino.
You can have two, as long as the one in front will knock down both of its
successors. In this way you can build quite elaborate designs, branching out
here and there, and, when the time is right, you can knock them all down
with a single flick of the finger. The same is true, as well see, with induction.
Inductive definitions
Inductive definitions are used a great deal in logic. In fact, we have been using
them implicitly throughout this book. For example, our definitions of the ws
of fol were really inductive definitions. So was our definition of the set of
inductive definitions terms of first-order arithmetic. Both of these definitions started by specifying
the simplest members of the defined collection, and then gave rules that told
us how to generate new members of the collection from old ones. This is
how inductive definitions work.
Lets look at another example, just to make things more explicit. Suppose
that for some reason we wanted to study an ambiguous variant of proposi-
tional logic, maybe as a mathematical model of English that builds in some
ambiguity. Lets take some primitive symbols, say A1 , . . . , An , and call these
propositional letters. Next, we will build up ws from these using our old
friends , , , , and . But we are going to let the language be ambiguous,
unlike fol, by leaving out all parentheses. How will we do this? To distinguish
ambig-ws these strings from ws, let us call them ambig-ws. Intuitively, what we want
to say is the following:
In this definition, clause (1) specifies the basic ambig-ws. It is called the
base clause base clause of the definition. Clauses (2) and (3) tell us how to form new
inductive clause ambig-ws from old ones. They are called inductive clauses. The final clause
final clause just informs us that all ambig-ws are generated by the earlier clauses, in case
we thought that the World Trade Center or the actor Brad Pitt or the set {2}
might be an ambig-w.
Chapter 16
Inductive definitions and inductive proofs / 457
Remember
a base clause, which specifies the basic elements of the defined set,
a final clause, which tells us that all the elements are either basic or
generated by the inductive clauses.
Inductive proofs
Having set up an inductive definition of the set of ambig-ws, we are in a
position to prove things about this set. For example, assuming the clauses of
our inductive definition as premises, we can easily prove that A1 A2 A3
is an ambig-w.
This proof shows us how the inductive definition of the ambig-ws is sup-
posed to work, but it is not an inductive proof. So lets try to prove something
about ambig-ws using the method of inductive proof. Indeed, lets prove a
few things that will help us identify strings that are not ambig-ws.
Consider the string . Obviously, this is not an ambig-w. But how do
we know? Well, clause (4) says it has to be formed by repeated applications of
clauses (1)(3). Examining these clauses, it seems obvious that anything you
get from them will have to contain at least one propositional letter. But what
kind of proof is that? What method are we applying when we say examining
these clauses, it seems obvious that . . . ? What we need is a way to prove the
following simple fact:
Notice that this claim has the form of a general conditional, where the
antecedent involves an inductively defined predicate:
Section 16.1
458 / Mathematical Induction
an inductive proof Proof: We will prove this proposition by induction on the ambig-
ws.
Basis: For our basis case, we need to show that all the propositional
letters are strings that contain at least one propositional letter. But
they do, since they in fact consist of exactly one such letter.
Induction: Suppose p and q are ambig-ws that each contain at least
one propositional letter. We want to show that the new ambig-ws
generated from these by clauses (2) and (3) will also contain at least
one propositional letter. This is clearly true, since p contains all
the propositional letters contained in p, and so contains at least one
propositional letter; and p q, p q, p q, and p q contain all
the propositional letters contained in p and q, and so contain at least
one (indeed at least two) propositional letters.
By induction, we can thus conclude that all ambig-ws contain at
least one propositional letter.
Chapter 16
Inductive definitions and inductive proofs / 459
w except the basic elements and things that can be generated from them by
repeated applications of our two rules, we can be sure that all the ambig-ws
have the property in question.
Lets try another example. Suppose we want to prove that the string
A1 A2 is not an ambig-w. Again, this is pretty obvious, but to prove
it we need to prove a general fact about the ambig-ws, one that will allow
us to conclude that this particular string does not qualify. The following fact
would suce:
Proposition 2. No ambig-w has the symbol occurring immediately before
one of the binary connectives: , , , .
Once again, note that the desired result has the form of a general condi-
tional claim, where the antecedent is our inductively defined predicate:
p [(p is an ambig-w) Q(p)]
This time, Q is the property of not having occurring immediately in front
of a binary connective. To prove this, we need a basis step and an inductive
step. The basis step must show that Q(p) holds for those expressions p that
are ambig-ws in virtue of clause (1), that is, the propositional letters. The
inductive step involves two cases, one corresponding to premise (2), the other
to premise (3). For (2), we must show that if an ambig-w p has property
Q, so does p. For (3), we need to prove that if p and q are ambig-ws with
property Q then so are p q, p q, p q, and p q. If we can do this,
the proof will be completed by induction, thanks to clause (4). After all, since
every ambig-w has to be obtained by repeated applications of (1), (2), and
(3), every ambig-w will have been shown to have the property in question.
But there is a problem when we try to carry out the details of this proof.
Do you see what it is? Think about trying to do either part of the inductive
step, either (2) or (3). For example, in case (2), how do we know that just
because p has property Q so does p? Well, we dont. For example, A1 has
property Q but A1 does not. (Find a similar problem with case (3).)
This is an example of the so-called Inventors Paradox. It is not a real inventors paradox
paradox, as in the case of Russells Paradox, but it is a bit counterintuitive.
It turns out that proofs by induction often get stuck, not because you are
trying to prove something false, but because you are not aiming high enough.
You need to prove more. In this case, what we have to prove to keep the
induction from getting stuck is this stronger claim: no ambig-w either begins
with a binary connective, or ends with a negation sign, or has a negation
sign immediately preceding a binary connective. So let Q be this stronger
property. It is clear that p [Q (p) Q(p)]. Thus, what we need to prove by
induction is that
Section 16.1
460 / Mathematical Induction
Make sure you understand how this definition works. For example, come up
with a string of seven letters that is a pal.
Now lets prove that every pal reads the same way back to front and front
palindromes to back, in other words, every pal is a palindrome. Here is our inductive proof
of this fact:
Proof: We prove by induction that every pal reads the same forwards
and backwards, that is, when the order of letters in the string is
reversed.
Basis: The basic elements of pal are single letters of the alphabet.
Clearly, any single letter reads the same way forwards or backwards.
Induction: Suppose that the pal reads the same way forwards or
backwards. (This is our inductive hypothesis.) Then we must show
that if you add a letter, say l, to the beginning and end of , then
the result, ll, reads the same way forwards and backwards. When
you reverse the string ll, you get l l, where is the result of
reversing the string . But by the inductive hypothesis, = , and
so the result of reversing ll is ll, i.e., it reads the same forwards
and backwards.
Chapter 16
Inductive definitions and inductive proofs / 461
Remember
a basis step, which shows that the property holds of the basic elements,
and
The assumption that begins the inductive step is called the inductive
hypothesis.
Exercises
Prove by induction that every semi-w has the following property: the number of right paren-
theses is equal to the number of left parentheses plus the number of negation signs.
Section 16.1
462 / Mathematical Induction
16.7 In the text, we proved that every pal is a palindrome, a string of letters that reads the same
. back to front and front to back. Is the converse true, that is, is every palindrome a pal? If so,
prove it. If not, fix up the definition so that it becomes true.
16.8 (Existential ws) In this problem we return to a topic raised in Problem 14.59. In that problem
. we defined an existential sentence as one whose prenex form contains only existential quantifiers.
A more satisfactory definition can be given by means of the following inductive definition. The
existential ws are defined inductively by the following clauses:
1. Every atomic or negated atomic w is existential.
2. If P1 , . . . , Pn are existential, so are (P1 . . . Pn ) and (P1 . . . Pn ).
3. If P is an existential w, so is P , for any variable .
4. Nothing is an existential w except in virtue of (1)(3).
Is our new definition equivalent to our old one? If not, how could it be modified to make it
equivalent?
16.9 Give a definition of universal w, just like that of existential w in the previous problem, but
. with universal quantifiers instead of existential. State and prove results analogous to the results
you proved there. Then show that every universal w is logically equivalent to the negation of
an existential w.
16.10 Define the class of wellfounded sets by means of the following inductive definition:
. 1. If C is any set of objects, each of which is either not a set or is itself a wellfounded set,
then C is a wellfounded set.
This exercise explores the relationship between the wellfounded sets and the cumulative con-
ception set discussed in the preceding chapter.
Chapter 16
Inductive definitions in set theory / 463
x [Set(x) Q(x)]
One of the advantages of the cumulative conception of set discussed in the preceding
chapter is that it allows one to prove such statements by induction on sets. How?
7. Use mathematical induction to show that there is no infinite sequence of wellfounded
sets a1 , a2 , a3 , . . . such that an+1 an for each natural number n.
Section 16.2
Inductive definitions in set theory
The way we have been stating inductive definitions seems reasonably rigorous.
Still, you might wonder about the status of clauses like
4. Nothing is an ambig-w unless it can be generated by repeated applica-
tions of (1), (2), and (3).
This clause is quite dierent in character from the others, since it mentions not
just the objects we are defining, but the other clauses of the definition itself.
You might also wonder just what is getting packed into the phrase repeated
applications.
One way to see that there is something dierent about clause (4) is to note
that the other clauses are obviously expressible using first-order formulas. For
example, if concat is a symbol for the concatenation function (that is, the
function that takes two expressions and places the first immediately to the
left of the second), then one could express (2) as
p [ambig-w(p) ambig-w(concat(, p))]
In contrast, clause (4) is not the sort of thing that can be expressed in fol.
However, it turns out that if we work within set theory, then we can ex- making the final
press inductive definitions with first-order sentences. Here, for example, is a clause more precise
definition of the set of ambig-ws that uses sets. It turns out that this defi-
nition can be transcribed into the language of set theory in a straightforward
way. The English version of the definition is as follows:
Section 16.2
464 / Mathematical Induction
Sets satisfying
clauses (1)-(3) Ambig-wffs
Figure 16.1: The set of ambig-ws is the intersection of all sets satisfying
(1)(3).
Definition The set S of ambig-ws is the smallest set satisfying the following
clauses:
2. If p is in S, then so is p.
What we have done here is replace the puzzling clause (4) by one that
refers to the smallest set satisfying (1)(3). How does that help? First of all,
smallest set what do we mean by smallest? We mean smallest in the sense of subset: we
want a set that satisfies (1)(3), but one that is a subset of any other set
satisfying (1)(3). How do we know that there is such a smallest set? We need
to prove a lemma, to show that our definition makes sense.
Chapter 16
Induction on the natural numbers / 465
The situation is illustrated in Figure 16.1. There are lots of sets that satisfy
clauses (1)(3) of our definition, most of which contain many elements that are
not ambig-ws. For example, the set of all finite strings of propositional letters
and connectives satisfies (1)(3), but it contains strings like A1 A2 that
arent ambig-ws. Our set theoretic definition takes the set S of ambig-ws
to be the smallest, that is, the intersection of all these sets.
Notice that we can now explain exactly why proof by induction is a valid justifying induction
form of reasoning. When we give an inductive proof, say that all ambig-ws
have property Q, what we are really doing is showing that the set {x | Q(x)}
satisfies clauses (1)(3). We show that the basic elements all have property
Q and that if you apply the generation rules to things that have Q, you will
get other things that have Q. But if Q satisfies clauses (1)(3), and S is the
intersection of all the sets that satisfy these clauses, then S Q. Which is to
say: all ambig-ws have property Q.
Exercises
16.12 Give an inductive definition of the set of ws of propositional logic, similar to the above
. definition, but putting in the parentheses in clause (3). That is, the set of ws should be
defined as the smallest set satisfying various clauses. Be sure to verify that there is such a
smallest set.
16.13 Based on your answer to Exercise 16.12, prove that every w has the same number of left
. parentheses as binary connectives.
Section 16.3
Induction on the natural numbers
Many students come away from the study of induction in math classes with
the feeling that it has something special to do with the natural numbers. By
now, it should be obvious that this method of proof is far more general than
that. We can prove things about many dierent kinds of sets using induction.
In fact, whenever a set is defined inductively, we can prove general claims
about its members using an inductive proof. Still, the natural numbers are
one of the simplest and most useful examples to which induction applies.
Just how are the natural numbers defined? Intuitively, the definition runs defining natural
numbers
Section 16.3
466 / Mathematical Induction
as follows:
1. 0 is a natural number.
2. If n N , then n + 1 N
Based on this definition, we can prove statements about natural numbers
by induction. Suppose we have some set Q of natural numbers and want to
prove that the set contains all natural numbers:
x [x N x Q]
2. If n Q, then n + 1 Q
then we know that N Q, since N is defined to be the smallest set satisfying
these clauses. And this is just another way of stating the universal claim we
want to prove.
Lets work through an example that illustrates induction on the natural
numbers.
Proposition 4. For every natural number n, the sum of the first n natural
numbers is n(n 1)/2.
Chapter 16
Induction on the natural numbers / 467
That is, our inductive hypothesis is that the sum of the first k natural
numbers is k(k 1)/2. We must show that the sum of the first k + 1
natural numbers is k(k + 1)/2. How do we conclude this? We simply
note that the sum of the first k + 1 natural numbers is k greater
than the sum of the first k natural numbers (since the first natural
number is zero, the second is one, and so on). We already know by
the inductive hypothesis that this latter sum is simply k(k 1)/2.
Thus the sum of the first k + 1 numbers is
k(k 1)
+k
2
Getting a common denominator gives us
k(k 1) 2k
+
2 2
which we factor to get
k(k + 1)
2
the desired result.
Exercises
16.15 Prove by induction that for all natural numbers n, 0 + 1 + . . . + n n2 . Your proof should
. not presuppose Proposition 4, which we proved in the text, though it will closely follow the
structure of that proof.
Section 16.3
468 / Mathematical Induction
16.18 Notice that 13 + 23 + 33 = 36 = 62 and that 13 + 23 + 33 + 43 + 53 = 225 = 152 . Prove that the
. sum of the first n perfect cubes is a square. [Hint: This is an instance of the inventors paradox.
You will have to prove something stronger than this.]
16.19 (after Polya) Examine the following incorrect proof that all logicians have the same shoe size.
. Identify and describe clearly why the proof is incorrect.
Basis: Every set containing just one logician, contains logicians all of whom have the
same shoe size.
Induction: Our induction hypothesis is that any set of n logicians contains logicians
with the same shoe size. Now look at any set of n+1 logicians. We must show that this
set contains logicians with the same shoe size. Number the logicians: 1, 2, 3, . . . , n, n+1,
and look at the sets {1, 2, 3, . . . , n} and {2, 3, 4, . . . , n + 1}. Each of these sets contain
only n logicians, therefore within each set all of the logicians have the same shoe size.
But the two sets overlap, so there must be only one shoe size among all n+1 logicians.
Section 16.4
Axiomatizing the natural numbers
Chapter 16
Axiomatizing the natural numbers / 469
1. x (s(x) = 0)
2. x y (s(x) = s(y) x = y)
3. x (x + 0 = x)
5. x (x 0 = 0)
6. x y [x s(y) = (x y) + x]
The first two axioms tell us essential properties of the successor function.
Together they ensure that the numbers are arranged in a sequence with no
loops. The first axiom tells us that the sequence cannot loop back to zero, since
then zero would be the successor of something (contradicting axiom one), and
that it cant loop back to some other number, since then that number would
be the successor of two dierent numbers (contradicting axiom two).
Axioms 3 and 4 define the properties of the binary addition operator in
terms of the successor function. The definition of + reflects the structure of
the natural numbers given by their inductive definition. In the first axiom we
state the truth that the result of adding 0 to any number is that number.
The second axiom says that the result of adding the successor of n to m is
the successor of the result of adding n to m, for any n and m. Together these
axioms tell us how to add any pair of numbers, since the first concerns adding
0, and the second the successor of a number, and all numbers are one or the
other.
Axioms 5 and 6 follow a similar pattern, and provide a definition for mul-
tiplication. The first tells the result of multiplying by 0, and the second the
result of multiplying by the successor of a number. Again the second axiom
relates the result of multiplying by the successor of a number to the result of
multiplying by that number.
We should view the claim that these axioms can serve as definitions of
addition and multiplication with a little suspicion. The second addition axiom
contains + on both sides of the equality making it look like an inductive
definition. But we are not giving an inductive definition of a set, but rather
defining the function +. The reason the definition works is that the function
applies to the natural numbers, a set that is itself inductively defined using
the successor function. So while axiom 4 does not allow us to eliminate the
+ function in one step, we can argue that + can be eliminated after some
number of applications of this axiom, followed by an application of axiom 3.
To see how this works, lets see how we could work out the value of
s(s(s(0))) + s(s(0)) by eliminating the + function. This is our ocial way
Section 16.4
470 / Mathematical Induction
What this says is that if Q(x) is satisfied by 0, and if its being satisfied by
some number n ensures that it is satisfied by s(n), then Q(x) is satisfied by
all natural numbers. (Actually, as with the Axiom of Comprehension in the
preceding chapter, the axiom needs to be stated a bit more generally than we
have formulated it. The w Q(x) may have free variables other than x, and
these need to be universally quantified.)
There are many other facts about the natural numbers which are obvious.
Some of these include the familiar commutative, associative, and distributive
Chapter 16
Axiomatizing the natural numbers / 471
laws of addition and multiplication. It turns out, however, that these facts,
and all other obvious facts, and many not-so-obvious facts, can be proven
from the axioms as set out above. Here is one of the simplest; we give an
informal proof, using just these axioms, of
x (s(x) = s(0) + x)
x (Q(x) Q(s(x)))
Lets see how we might prove a more complicated result, like the commu-
tativity of +:
x y (x + y = y + x)
We will not prove this, since it is a valuable exercise that you should complete.
But we will sketch the proof, since proving it requires a technique we havent
encountered before, known as double induction. It turns out that to prove this
claim, we need to use induction on both x and y.
Overall, the proof of this claim will be an induction on x, with the goal of
proving the universal claim x Q(x), where Q(x) is the formula y (x + y =
y + x). So the base case of the proof must establish Q(0), that is:
y (0 + y = y + 0)
y (n + y = y + n)
y (s(n) + y = y + s(n))
Section 16.4
472 / Mathematical Induction
Now, whats fun about a double inductive proof is that you also need to use
induction to prove the claims within the cases. For example, your base case
above will be demonstrated by induction on y, with the new predicate Q (y):
0+y =y+0
This induction on y will have a base case establishing (the trivial) Q (0):
0+0=0+0
Its inductive case will assume Q (m):
0+m=m+0
and try to show Q (s(m)):
0 + s(m) = s(m) + 0
This all turns out to be easy. But wait, theres more! That was just the
base case of our induction on x. So now we assume:
y (n + y = y + n)
and try to prove:
y (s(n) + y = y + s(n))
And this claim we also have to prove by induction on y. That is, we have to
prove the base case:
s(n) + 0 = 0 + s(n)
followed by an inductive case starting from the inductive hypothesis:
s(n) + m = m + s(n)
and concluding with:
s(n) + s(m) = s(m) + s(n)
At which point, were done.
It turns out that none of this is terribly hard. But keeping straight exactly
where you are and what youre trying to prove can be terribly confusing. Well
let you try your hand at it in Exercise 16.27, where youll need to fill out the
details of this proof.
Peano Arithmetic is remarkably powerful. Indeed, almost all of the theo-
rems mathematicians have proven about the natural numbers can be proven
G
odel Incompleteness in pa. There are, however, truths about the natural numbers that cannot be
Theorem proven from pa. Not only that, but any attempt to set down a list of first-
order axioms true of the natural numbers must, in some sense, fail. We will
discuss this result, known as Godels Incompleteness Theorem, in Chapter 19.
Chapter 16
Induction in Fitch / 473
Exercises
Give informal proofs, similar in style to the one in the text, that the following statements are consequences
of pa. Explicitly identify any predicates to which you apply induction. When proving the later theorems,
you may assume the results of the earlier problems.
16.24
x y (x + s(y) = s(x) + y) [Hint: Dont get confused by the two universal quantifiers. Start
.
by assuming that x is an arbitrary number and perform induction on y. This does not require
double induction.]
16.25
x y z (x + z = y + z x = y) [Hint: this is an easy induction on z.]
.
16.26
x y z ((x + y) + z = x + (y + z)) [Hint: This is relatively easy, but you have to per-
.
form induction on z. That is, your basis case is to show that (x + y) + 0 = x + (y + 0).
You should then assume (x + y) + n = x + (y + n) as your inductive hypothesis and show
(x + y) + s(n) = x + (y + s(n)).]
16.27
x y (x + y = y + x) [Hint: this requires double induction.]
.
16.28
x y (x y = y x) [Hint: To prove this, you will first need to prove the lemma
.
x y (s(x) y = (x y) + y). Prove this by induction on y.]
Section 16.5
Induction in Fitch
Fitch contains an inference rule for induction on the natural numbers which
exactly parallels the informal technique that we have just described. In order
to complete a formal proof by induction of a universally quantified formula,
you must be able to cite the statement of the base case of the induction, and
a subproof which represents the step case:
Section 16.5
474 / Mathematical Induction
Peano Induction:
P(0)
n P(n)
Like many of the rules of Fitch, the induction rule has a default use. If no
conclusion is given, then Fitch tries to determine the appropriate conclusion
on the basis of the citations. Specifically it will try to use the base case formula
to decide what you are trying to use the rule to prove.
If you use the Add Support Steps command with a step containing a uni-
versally quantified formula using this rule, then the necessary base case and
step proofs will be inserted into the proof.
Exercises
Use Fitch to construct formal proofs of the following theorems from the six Peano Axioms plus the
Peano Induction rule. In the corresponding Exercise file, you will find as premises only the specific
axioms needed to prove the goal theorem. In the starred exercises, you may want to use one or more
earlier proofs as lemmas. If you have not read Section 10.6 describing the Lemma rule in Fitch, you
might want to do so before attempting the starred exercises. (Lemmas are, of course, never necessary
they simply make life a whole lot easier.)
Chapter 16
Ordering the Natural Numbers / 475
16.35 x y z (x + z = y + z x = y)
16.37 x y (s(x) y = (x y) + y) [Hint: This is the key lemma that you will need to prove Exer-
cise 16.38. In order to prove it, you will need the Associativity and Commutativity of Addition
(Exercises 16.34 and 16.36, respectively).]
16.38 x y (x y = y x) [Hint: This is pretty easy, once you have Exercises 16.31 and 16.37 to use
as lemmas.]
Section 16.6
Ordering the Natural Numbers
We usually think of the natural numbers distributed along a number line with
0 on the left and the numbers increasing toward the right. A number further
to the left is less than any number to its right. We can express this idea
formally using the following axiom, which defines the relation <.
This says that x is less than y whenever we can obtain y by adding some
non-zero number to x. We will see that the relation < plays an important role
in a second form of induction that we will describe in the next section. First
though, lets investigate the properties of this relation.
Any relation, R, which has the following three properties is called a total
strict ordering (TSO):
Section 16.6
476 / Mathematical Induction
1. Irreflexive: x xRx
In addition to < as we have just defined it, other examples of total strict
orderings include alphabetical ordering among letters, or among words. Many
familiar orderings are not total strict orderings though. For example, the re-
lation taller than is not a TSO, since trichotomy fails. Consider for example,
two dierent people who are the same height. Such a relation is called a partial
ordering.
Anyway, we would like to show that < is a TSO.
x x < x
Proof: Suppose that there is some number a with a < a. Then by the
definition of < there is a number k such that a+s(k) = a. Axiom 3 of
pa tells us that a+0 = a and so by substitution a+s(k) = a+0. This
tells us that s(k) = 0 (see Exercise 16.25) contradicting axiom 1 of
pa. So there can be no such number a, showing that < is irreflexive.
Chapter 16
Ordering the Natural Numbers / 477
Proposition 7. Trichotomy
x y (x < y x = y y < x)
y (a < y a = y y < a)
by induction on y.
Basis: We must show (a < 0 a = 0 0 < a). We know that every
number, including a, is either 0, or the successor of some number. 0
is less than any successor, so one of the second two disjuncts must
hold.
Induction: We assume that (a < k a = k k < a) for some k and
show that (a < s(k) a = s(k) s(k) < a). Lets split into cases
according to the disjuncts of the induction hypothesis.
Exercises
Use Fitch to construct formal proofs of the following theorems from the Peano Axioms plus the definition
of <. In the corresponding Exercise file, you will find as premises only the specific axioms needed to prove
the goal theorem.
16.39 x x < 0
16.41 x y x < y [Hint: Notice that the Exercise file contains the definition of < but none of the
Peano Axioms! So although this follows from Exercise 16.40, you wont be able to use your
proof of that that as a lemma. The proof is actually pretty simple, but requires some thought.]
Section 16.6
478 / Mathematical Induction
For the following exercises you will want to use your proofs from Section 16.5 as lemmas.
16.43 x (x = 0 0 < x)
16.45 x x < x
16.47 x y (x < y x = y y < x) [Hint: Youll find some earlier exercises from this section to be
handy lemmas for this proof.]
16.48 Define so that x y (x y z x + z = y). Give informal proofs that is reflexive and
. transitive.
16.49 Define so that x y (x y y < x). Give informal proofs that is reflexive and
. transitive.
Section 16.7
Strong Induction
Sometimes the induction principle that we have described does not fit well
with the property of natural numbers that we are trying to prove. As an
example of this imagine proving that every natural number greater than one
is either prime, or can be expressed as the product of primes. Mathematicians
call this fact The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic. Anything that merits
such a grand name deserves an investigation. Lets see what happens when
we try to prove this using ordinary induction on the natural numbers. We will
start with a base case of n = 2, since the claim does not apply to 0 or 1.
Chapter 16
Strong Induction / 479
It may have dawned on you that our problem is just another example of
the inventors paradox, discussed on page 459. For the induction to work, we
need to prove a somewhat stronger claim than the one we tried using. Suppose
we had tried to prove that for any n, n and all numbers less than n are either
prime or the product of primes. If we had used this stronger claim, then at
the inductive step, we could have assumed not just that the claim applied to
n, but also that it applied to the smaller numbers j and k. We could then
have finished the proof in the way we indicated.
This is a suciently common problem that a separate induction principle
has been introduced to handle it. The principle is known as strong induction strong induction
(a.k.a. complete or course of values induction). The basic idea is that, if you
can show that whenever a property holds of the numbers smaller than n, it
also holds of n, then you can conclude that it holds of all the natural numbers.
The principle can be stated like this:
(SI) n [k (k < n Q(k)) Q(n)] x Q(x)
How would an informal proof using this principle look? The goal of the
proof would be to show that the antecedent of this conditional is true, which
would then allow us to conclude x Q(x) by Elim. So we need to show:
(1) n [k (k < n Q(k)) Q(n)]
This is a universal claim that we prove using general conditional proof.
That is, we take an arbitrary number n and assume:
(2) k (k < n Q(k))
Section 16.7
480 / Mathematical Induction
In other words, we assume that every number less than n has the property
in question. This is our inductive hypothesis. The goal of the proof is then to
show that n has the property, that is, Q(n).
Here, we have to consider two cases. If n = 0, then our inductive hypothesis
(2) tells us nothing at all, since it holds trivially for any Q. So we need to show
Q(0) without the benefit of any other information. But if n = 0, then our goal
is to show Q(n) based on the substantive knowledge that all the predecessors
of n have the property Q. So just like ordinary induction, we in eect have
a base case, Q(0), and an inductive case, Q(n) for n > 0. Only in the latter
case will the inductive hypothesis (2) give us any help.
Proofs by strong induction thus take the following form:
Conclude: x Q(x)
Now how can we justify the principle of strong induction? Ordinary in-
duction is justified by virtue of how the set of natural numbers is inductively
defined, as we saw in Section 16.3. But strong induction does not follow the
clauses of the inductive definition, so it is legitimate to ask how we know it is
a valid principle. It turns out that we can justify the principle by proving that
it follows from ordinary induction. That is, (SI) can be proven by induction.
The key trick is to remember that strong induction is really just a gener-
alized solution to the inventors paradox, and so in order to prove it, we will
use ordinary induction on a stronger property.
Proposition 9.
and showing:
(b) x Q(x)
But instead of proving (b) directly, we will first prove the stronger:
Chapter 16
Strong Induction / 481
This says for every x, x and all of its predecessors has the property
Q. Clearly, (c) (b), so if we can prove (a) (c), we will have
(a) (b), as desired.
We prove (c) from (a) by ordinary induction on x.
Basis: We need to show that y ((y = 0 y < 0) Q(y)).
Lets begin by instantiating our assumption (a) to 0:
k (k < 0 Q(k)) Q(0)
Section 16.7
482 / Mathematical Induction
You might think that strong induction is poorly named, since it follows
from ordinary weak induction. But the point of the name is not that the
principle is stronger than ordinary induction. In fact, anything you can prove
by one you can also prove by the other. The dierence is simply that strong
induction allows you to use a stronger inductive hypothesis. You get to assume
that all the numbers smaller than n have the property, not just its immediate
predecessor.
You should probably be able to guess the form of Fitchs strong induction
rule:
Strong Induction:
n x (x < n P(x))
Exercises
The following exercises work together to result in a formal proof of Proposition 9. Youll need to do them
all to get to the final proof, but it will be worth the work.
16.50 We begin by proving a simple lemma, namely that every number is either 0 or the successor
of some other number. If you completed exercise 16.43, then you already proved something
similar.
x (x = 0 y x = s(y))
16.51 You may have thought that we would use the lemma in the previous exercise in the proof of
Proposition 9, but in fact we are going to use it to prove a second lemma. In the informal proof
of Proposition 9 we appealed twice to the following fact:
Chapter 16
Strong Induction / 483
16.53 Finally open the file Exercise 16.53. This asks you to prove Proposition 9. Formalize the informal
proof of this result that we gave in the previous section, using the lemma from Exercise 16.52
where necessary. You may use Fo Con, but if you like a challenge you can try to complete the
proof without using it.
Section 16.7
Chapter 17
Advanced Topics in
Propositional Logic
This chapter contains some more advanced ideas and results from proposi-
tional logic, logic without quantifiers. The most important part of the chapter
is the proof of the Completeness Theorem for the propositional proof system
FT that you learned in Part I. This result was discussed in Section 8.3 and
will be used in the final chapter when we prove the Completeness Theorem
for the full system F. The final two sections of this chapter treat topics in
propositional logic of considerable importance in computer science.
Section 17.1
Truth assignments and truth tables
In Part I, we kept our discussion of truth tables pretty informal. For example,
modeling truth tables we did not give a precise definition of truth tables. For some purposes this
informality suces, but if we are going to prove any theorems about fol,
such as the Completeness Theorem for the system FT , this notion needs to
be modeled in a mathematically precise way. As promised, we use set theory
to do this modeling.
We can abstract away from the particulars of truth tables and capture
truth assignments what is essential to the notion as follows. Let us define a truth assignment for
a first-order language to be any function h from the set of all atomic sentences
of that language into the set {true, false} provided that h assigns false to
the formula . That is, for each atomic sentence A of the language, h gives us
a truth value, written h(A), either true or false. Intuitively, we can think
of each such function h as representing one row of the reference columns of a
large truth table.
modeling semantics Given a truth assignment h, we can define what it means for h to make an
arbitrary sentence of the language true or false. There are many equivalent
ways to do this. One natural way is to extend h to a function h defined on
the set of all sentences and taking values in the set {true, false}. Thus if
we think of h as giving us a row of the reference column, then h fills in the
values of the truth tables for all sentences of the language, that is, the values
484
Truth assignments and truth tables / 485
Remember
Section 17.1
486 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
Exercises
17.1 Recall the Sheer stroke symbol from Exercise 7.29, page 198, and the three place symbol
. discussed on page 195. Suppose we had included these as basic symbols of our language. Write
| R) and h((P,
out the clauses for h(Q Q, R)) that would be needed to complete the definition
given above.
Section 17.2
Completeness for propositional logic
We are now in a position to prove the Completeness Theorem for propositional
logic first stated on page 222. Recall that we used the notation FT to stand
for that part of F that uses only the introduction and elimination rules for
, , , , and . Given a set T of sentences and another sentence S, we
write T T S to mean that there is a formal proof of S in the system FT with
premises drawn from T . It is not assumed that every sentence in T is actually
used in the proof. For example, it might be that the set T is an infinite set of
sentences while only a finite number can be used in any one proof, of course.
Notice that if T T S and T is a subset of some other set T of sentences, then
T T S. We restate the desired result as follows:
Completeness of FT Theorem (Completeness of FT ) If a sentence S is a tautological consequence
of a set T of sentences then T T S.
You might think that the way to prove the Completeness Theorem would
be to assume that S is a tautological consequence of T and then try to con-
struct a proof of S from T . But since we dont know anything about the
meaning of S or of the sentences in T , this strategy would get us nowhere. In
fact, the way we will prove the theorem is by proving its contrapositive: that
if T T S (that is, if there is no proof of S from T ), then S is not a tautological
consequence of T . That is to say, we will show that if T T S, then there is
a truth assignment h that makes all of the sentences in T true, but S false.
In other words, we will show that T {S} is tt-satisfiable. The following
lemma will be helpful in carrying out this proof.
Chapter 17
Completeness for propositional logic / 487
P1
..
.
Pn
S
..
.
P1
..
.
Pn
S
..
.
S
S
Section 17.2
488 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
we can state the following theorem, which turns out to be equivalent to the
Completeness Theorem:
Theorem (Reformulation of Completeness) Every formally consistent set of
sentences is tt-satisfiable.
The Completeness Theorem results from applying this to the set T {S}.
outline of proof The remainder of the section is devoted to proving this theorem. The proof is
quite simple in outline.
Completeness for formally complete sets: First we will show that this
theorem holds of any formally consistent set with an additional property,
formally complete set known as formal completeness. A set T is formally complete if for any
of sentences sentence S of the language, either T T S or T T S. This is really
an unusual property of sets of sentences, since it says that the set is
so strong that it settles every question that can be expressed in the
language, since for any sentence, either it or its negation is provable
from T .
Putting things together: The fact that this expanded set is tt-satisfiable
will guarantee that the original set is as well, since a truth value assign-
ment that satisfies the more inclusive set will also satisfy the original
set.
The rest of this section is taken up with filling out this outline.
2. T T (R S) i T T R or T T S
3. T T S i T T S
4. T T (R S) i T T R or T T S
Chapter 17
Completeness for propositional logic / 489
P1
..
.
Pn
..
.
R
Q1
..
.
Qk
..
.
S
To merge these two proofs into a single proof, we simply take the
premises of both and put them into a single list above the Fitch
bar. Then we follow the Fitch bar with the steps from the proof of
R, followed by the steps from the proof of S. The citations in these
steps need to be renumbered, but other than that, the result is a
legitimate proof in FT . At the end of this proof, we add a single step
containing R S which we justify by Intro. The merged proof
looks like this:
Section 17.2
490 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
P1
..
.
Pn
Q1
..
.
Qk
..
.
R
..
.
S
RS
We now turn to (2). One half of this, the direction from right to
left, is very easy, using the rule of Intro, so lets prove the other
direction. Thus, we want to show that if T T (R S) then T T R or
T T S. (This is not true in general, but it is for formally consistent,
formally complete sets.)
Assume that T T (R S), but, toward a proof by contradiction,
that T T R and T T S. Since T is formally complete, it follows
that T T R and T T S. This means that we have two formal
proofs p1 and p2 from premises in T , p1 having R as a conclusion,
p2 having S as a conclusion. As we have seen, we can merge these
two proofs into one long proof p that has both of these as conclusions.
Then, by Intro, we can prove R S. But then using the proof of
the version of DeMorgan from Exercise 6.25, we can extend this proof
to get a proof of (R S). Thus T T (R S). But by assumption
we also have T T (R S). By merging the proofs of (R S) and
R S we can get a proof of by adding a single step, justified by
Intro. But this means that T is formally inconsistent, contradicting
our assumption that it is formally consistent.
One direction of part (3) follows immediately from the definition of
formal completeness, while the left to right half follows easily from
the definition of formal consistency.
Parts (4) and (5) are similar to part (2) and are left as an exercise.
With this lemma in hand, we can now fill in the first step in our outline.
Chapter 17
Completeness for propositional logic / 491
The next step in our proof of completeness is to figure out a way to get from
formally consistent sets of ws to sets of ws that are both formally consistent
and formally complete. The next lemma shows us that this is not as hard as
it may seem at first.
Section 17.2
492 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
We can now carry out the second step in our outline of the proof of the
Completeness Theorem.
Just for the record, lets put all this together into a proof of the Completeness
Theorem for FT .
Chapter 17
Completeness for propositional logic / 493
Remember
2. The first step is to show the result for sets T which are also formally
complete.
3. The second step is to show how to extend any formally consistent set
to one that is both formally consistent and formally complete.
Exercises
{(A B) A, C A, A A, B}
The Fitch files Exercise 17.4A and Exercise 17.4B contain proofs showing that T T A and
T T A. Take these two proofs and merge them into a third proof showing that T T .
Submit the merged proof as Proof 17.4.
Section 17.2
494 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
For the following three exercises, suppose our language contains only two predicates, Cube and Small,
two individual constants, a and b, and the sentences that can be formed from these by means of the
truth-functional connectives.
Show that this set is formally consistent and formally complete. To prove the former, you
will have to appeal to the Soundness Theorem. To prove the latter, you will want to refer to
Lemma 5.
By Proposition 4, there is a truth assignment h making all these sentences true. What values
does h assign to each of the atomic sentences of the language?
17.7 This time let T be the following set of sentences (note the dierence in the first sentence):
|.
{(Cube(a) Small(a)), Cube(b) Cube(a), Small(a) Small(b)}
This set is not formally complete. Use the procedure described in the proof of Proposition 6 to
extend this to a formally consistent, formally complete set. (Use alphabetical ordering of atomic
sentences.) What is the resulting set? What is the truth value assignment h that satisfies this
set? Submit a world making the sentences in your formally complete set true.
17.8 Suppose our language has an infinite number of atomic sentences A1 , A2 , A3 , . . .. Let T be the
. following set of sentences:
{A1 A2 , A2 A3 , A3 A4 , . . .}
There are infinitely many distinct truth value assignments satisfying this set. Give a general
description of these assignments. Which of these assignments would be generated from the
procedure we used in our proof of the Completeness Theorem?
Each of the following four exercises contains an argument. Classify each argument as being (A) provable
in FT , (B) provable in F but not in FT , or (C) not provable in F. In justifying your answer, make
explicit any appeal you make to the Soundness and Completeness Theorems for FT and for F. (Of
course we have not yet proven the latter.) Recall from Chapter 10 that sentences whose main operator
is a quantifier are treated as atomic in the definition of tautological consequence.
Chapter 17
Horn sentences / 495
17.13 Prove the half of Lemma 2 that we did not prove, the direction from right to left.
.
17.14 Prove the right-to-left half of Part (4) of 17.15 Prove the left-to-right half of Part (4) of
. Lemma 3. . Lemma 3.
17.16 In the inductive proof of Proposition 4, carry out the step for sentences of the form R S.
.
Section 17.3
Horn sentences
In Chapter 4 you learned how to take any sentence built up without quantifiers
and transform it into one in conjunctive normal form (CNF), CNF, that is, one
which is a conjunction of one or more sentences, each of which is a disjunction
of one or more literals. Literals are atomic sentences and their negations. We
will call a literal positive or negative depending on whether it is an atomic positive and
sentence or the negation of an atomic sentence, respectively. negative literals
A particular kind of CNF sentence turns out to be important in computer
science. These are the so-called Horn sentences, named not after their shape,
but after the American logician Alfred Horn, who first isolated them and stud-
ied some of their properties. A Horn Sentence is a sentence in CNF that has Horn sentences
the following additional property: every disjunction of literals in the sentence
contains at most one positive literal. Later in the section we will find that
there is a more intuitive way of writing Horn sentences if we use the connec-
tive . But for now we restrict attention to sentences involving only , ,
and .
The following sentences are all in CNF but none of them are Horn sen-
tences:
Section 17.3
496 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
Chapter 17
Horn sentences / 497
say,
A1 . . . An B
This can be rewritten using and as:
(A1 . . . An ) B
This is the typical case, but there are the important limiting cases, dis-
junctions with a positive literal but no negative literals, and disjunctions with
some negative literals but no positive literal. By a logical sleight of hand,
though, we can in fact rewrite these in the same conditional form. The sleight
of hand is achieved by introducing a couple of rather odd atomic sentences,
and our old friend . The first of these is assumed to be always true. The
second, of course, is always false. Using these,
A1 . . . An
1. (A1 . . . An ) B
2. (A1 . . . An )
3. B
Using the truth table method, we could program a computer to check to see
if a sentence is tt-satisfiable or not since the truth table method is completely ineciency of
mechanical. You can think of our Taut Con routine as doing something like truth tables
this, though actually it is more clever than this brute force method. In general,
though, any method of checking arbitrary formulas for tt-satisfiability is quite
expensive. It consumes a lot of resources. For example, a sentence involving
50 atomic sentences has 250 rows in its truth table, a very big number. For
Horn sentences, however, we can in eect restrict attention to a single row. It
is this fact that accounts for the importance of this class of sentences.
This ecient method for checking the satisfiability of Horn sentences, satisfaction algorithm
known as the satisfaction algorithm for Horn sentences, is really quite simple. for Horn sentences
Section 17.3
498 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
We first describe the method, and then apply it to a couple of examples. The
idea behind the method is to build a one-row truth table by working back and
forth, using the conjuncts of the sentence to figure out which atomic sentences
need to have true written beneath them. We will state the algorithm twice,
once for the Horn sentences in CNF form, but then also for the conditional
form.
satisfaction algorithm Satisfaction algorithm for Horn sentences: Suppose we have a Horn
for Horn sentences sentence S built out of atomic sentences A1 , . . . , An . Here is an ecient
procedure for determining whether S is tt-satisfiable.
1. Start out as though you were going to build a truth table, by listing all
the atomic sentences in a row, followed by S. But do not write true or
false beneath any of them yet.
2. Check to see which if any of the atomic sentences are themselves con-
juncts of S. If so, write true in the reference column under these atomic
sentences.
3. If some of the atomic sentences are now assigned true, then use these to
fill in as much as you can of the right hand side of the table. For example,
if you have written true under A5 , then you will write false wherever
you find A5 . This, in turn, may tell you to fill in some more atomic
sentences with true. For example, if A1 A3 A5 is a conjunct of S,
and each of A1 and A5 have been assigned false, then write true
under A3 . Proceed in this way until you run out of things to do.
4. One of two things will happen. One possibility is that you will reach a
point where you are forced to assign false to one of the conjuncts of
S, and hence to S itself. In this case, the sentence is not tt-satisfiable.
But if this does not happen, then S is tt-satisfiable. For then you can
fill in all the remaining columns of atomic sentences with false. This
will give you a truth assignment that makes S come out true, as we will
prove below. (There may be other assignments that make S true; our
algorithm just generates one of them.)
Lets apply this algorithm to an example.
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Consider the sentence
Chapter 17
Horn sentences / 499
To make this fit on the page, lets abbreviate the two atomic sentences
Home(claire) and Home(max) by C and M, respectively. Open Boole and
create the following table (it will be easier if you choose By Row in the
Edit menu):
C M C M (M C)
2. The first step of the above method tells us to put true under any atomic
sentence that is a conjunct of S. In this case, this means we should put a
true under C. So enter a t under the reference column for C.
3. We now check to see how much of the right side of the table we can fill in.
Using Boole, check which columns on the right hand side call on columns
that are already filled in. There is only one, the one under C. Fill it in
to obtain the following:
C M C M (M C)
t f
C M C M (M C)
t t f
5. But this means the second conjunct gets assigned false, so the whole
sentence comes out false.
C M C M (M C)
t t f f
6. Finish this row of your table and save the table as Table Horn 1.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Congratulations
Lets restate the satisfaction algorithm for Horn sentences in conditional
form, since many people find it more intuitive, and then apply it to an example.
Satisfaction algorithm for Horn sentences in conditional form: Sup- algorithm for
pose we have a Horn sentence S in conditional form, built out of atomic conditional Horn
sentences A1 , . . . , An , as well as and . sentences
1. If there are any conjuncts of the form Ai , write true in the refer-
ence column under each such Ai .
Section 17.3
500 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
4. Again, one of two things will happen. You may reach a point where you
are forced to assign false to one of a conditional of the form (B1 . . .
Bk ) because you have assigned true to each of the Bi . In this case
you must assign false to S, in which case S is not tt-satisfiable. If this
does not happen, then fill in the remaining reference columns of atomic
sentences with false. This will give a truth assignment that makes all
the conditionals true and hence S true as well.
(A B) (B C) B
((A B) ) (B C) ( B)
We wont actually write out the table, but instead will just talk through the
method. First, we see that if the sentence is to be satisfied, we must assign
true to B, since B is a conjunct. Then, looking at the second conjunct,
B C, we see that assigning true to B forces us to assign true to C. But at
this point, we run out of things that we are forced to do. So we can assign A
the value false getting get an assignment that makes remaining conditional,
and hence the whole sentence, true.
correctness of algorithm How do we know that this algorithm is correct? Well, we dont, yet. The
examples may have convinced you, but they shouldnt have. We really need
to give a proof.
Theorem The algorithm for the satisfiability of Horn sentences is correct, in
that it classifies as tt-satisfiable exactly the tt-satisfiable Horn sentences.
Proof: There are two things to be proved here. One is that any
tt-satisfiable sentence is classified as tt-satisfiable by the algorithm.
The other is that anything classified by the algorithm as tt-satisfiable
really is tt-satisfiable. We are going to prove this result for the form
of the algorithm that deals with conditionals. Before getting down
to work, lets rephrase the algorithm with a bit more precision. De-
fine sets T 0 , T 1 , . . . of atomic sentences, together with and , as
follows. Let T 0 = {}. Let T 1 be the set consisting of together
Chapter 17
Horn sentences / 501
Remember
Section 17.3
502 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
Exercises
17.17 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Table Horn 1.
17.18 A sentence in CNF can be thought of as a list of sentences, each of which is a disjunction of
literals. In the case of Horn sentences, each of these disjunctions contains at most one positive
literal. Open Horns Sentences. You will see that this is a list of sentences, each of which is a
disjunction of literals, at most one of which is positive. Use the algorithm given above to build
a world where all the sentences come out true, and save it as World 17.18.
17.19 Open Horns Other Sentences. You will see that this is a list of sentences, each of which is a
|. disjunctive Horn sentence. Use the algorithm given above to see if you can build a world where
all the sentences come out true. If you can, save the world as World 17.19. If you cannot, explain
how the algorithm shows this.
17.20 Rewrite the following Horn sentences in conditional form. Here, as usual, A, B, and C are taken
. to be atomic sentences.
1. A (A B C) C
2. (A B C) C
3. (A B) (A B)
Use Boole to try out the satisfaction algorithm on the following Horn sentences (two are in conditional
form). Give the complete row that results from the application of the algorithm. In other words, the table
you submit should have a single row corresponding to the assignment that results from the application
of the algorithm. Assume that A, B, C, and D are atomic sentences. (If you use Verify Table to check
your table, Boole will tell you that there arent enough rows. Simply ignore the complaint.)
17.21 A (A B) (B C) 17.22 A (A B) D
17.23 A (A B) B 17.24 A (A B) B
Chapter 17
Horn sentences / 503
The programming language Prolog is based on Horn sentences. It uses a slightly dierent notation,
though. The clause
(A1 . . . An ) B
is frequently written
B : A1 , . . . , An
or
B A1 , . . . , An
and read B, if A1 through An . The following exercises use this Prolog notation.
The first five clauses state instances of some general facts about the relations mother of, father
of, and ancestor of. (Prolog actually lets you say things with variables, so we would not actually
need multiple instances of the same scheme. For example, rather than state both the first two
clauses, we could just state AncestorOf(x, y) MotherOf(x, y).) The last three clauses describe
some particular facts about a, b, c, and d. Use the Horn satisfaction algorithm to determine
whether the above set of Horn sentences (in conditional form) is satisfiable.
17.28 The Prolog program in Exercise 17.27 might be considered as part of a database. To ask
. whether it entails B, Prolog adds
B
to the database and runs the Horn algorithm on the enlarged database. If the algorithm fails,
then Prolog answers yes. Otherwise Prolog answers no. Justify this procedure.
17.29 Use the procedure of the Exercise 17.28 to determine whether the following are consequences
. of the Prolog program given in Exercise 17.27.
1. Ancestor(a, c)
2. Ancestor(c, d)
3. Mother(a, b)
4. Mother(a, d)
Section 17.3
504 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
17.30 Suppose you have a Horn sentence which can be put into conditional form in a way that does
. not contain any conjunct of form 3 in Proposition 7. Show that it is satisfiable. Similarly, show
that if it can be put into a conditional form that does not contain a conjunct of form 2, then
it is satisfiable.
Section 17.4
Resolution
People are pretty good at figuring out when one sentence is a tautological
consequence of another, and when it isnt. If it is, we can usually come up
with a proof, especially when we have been taught the important methods of
proof. And when it isnt, we can usually come up with an assignment of truth
values that makes the premises true and the conclusion false. But for computer
applications, we need a reliable and ecient algorithm for determining when
one sentence is a tautological consequence of another sentence or a set of
sentences.
Recall that S is a tautological consequence of premises P1 , . . . , Pn if and
only if the set {P1 , . . . , Pn , S}is not tt-satisfiable, that is to say, its conjunc-
tion is not tt-satisfiable. Thus, the problem of checking for tautological conse-
quence and the problem of checking to see that a sentence is not tt-satisfiable
amount to the same thing. The truth table method provides us with a reliable
method for doing this. The trouble is that it can be highly expensive in terms
of time and paper (or computer memory). If we had used it in Fitch, there
are many problems that would have bogged down your computer intolerably.
In the case of Horn sentences, we have seen a much more ecient method,
one that accounts for the importance of Horn sentences in logic programming.
In this section, we present a method that applies to arbitrary sentences in
CNF. It is not in general as ecient as the Horn sentence algorithm, but
it is often much more ecient than brute force checking of truth tables. It
also has the advantage that it extends to the full first-order language with
quantifiers. It is known as the resolution method, and lies at the heart of many
applications of logic in computer science. While it is not the algorithm that
we have actually implemented in Fitch, it is closely related to that algorithm.
set of clauses The basic notion in resolution is that of a set of clauses. A clause is just
any finite set of literals. Thus, for example,
C1 = {Small(a), Cube(a), BackOf(b, a)}
is a clause. So is
C2 = {Small(a), Cube(b)}
Chapter 17
Resolution / 505
The special notation 2 is used for the empty clause. A clause C is said to empty clause
be satisfied by a truth assignment h provided at least one of the literals in
C is assigned true by h. 1 The empty clause 2 clearly is not tt-satisfiable by
any assignment, since it does not contain any elements to be made true. If
C = 2 then h satisfies C if and only if the disjunction of the sentences in C
is assigned true by h.
A nonempty set S of clauses is said to be satisfied by the truth assignment
h provided each clause C in S is satisfied by h. Again, this is equivalent to
saying that the CNF sentence formed by conjoining the disjunctions formed
from clauses in S is satisfied by h.
The goal of work on resolution is to come up with as ecient an algorithm
as possible for determining whether a set of clauses is tt-satisfiable. The basic
insight of the theory stems from the observation that in trying to show that
a particular set S is not tt-satisfiable, it is often easier to show that a larger
set S derived from it is not tt-satisfiable. As long as the method of getting
S from S insures that the two sets are satisfied by the same assignments, we
can work with the larger set S . Indeed, we might apply the same method
over and over until it became transparent that the sets in question are not
tt-satisfiable. The method of doing this is the so-called resolution method.
Resolution Method: resolution method
1. Start with a set T of sentences in CNF which you hope to show is not
tt-satisfiable. Transform each of these sentences into a set of clauses in
the natural way: replace disjunctions of literals by clauses made up of
the same literals, and replace conjunctions by sets of clauses. Call the
set of all these clauses S. The aim now is to show S is not tt-satisfiable.
assignment to satisfy a set of literals: one where we defined what it means for an assignment
to satisfy a set of sentences thought of as a theory, and one where we think of the set as a
resolution clause. It would be better if two dierent words were used. But they arent, so
the reader must rely on context to tell which use is intended.
Section 17.4
506 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
that in order for an assignment h to satisfy the set {C1 , C2 }, h will have
to assign true to at least one of Cube(a), Cube(b), or BackOf(b,a). So let
C3 = {Cube(a), Cube(b), BackOf(b, a)} be an additional clause. Then the set
of clauses {C1 , C2 } and {C1 , C2 , C3 } are satisfied by exactly the same assign-
ments. The clause C3 is a resolvent of the first set of clauses.
For another example, let C1 , C2 , and C3 be the following three clauses:
C1 = {Home(max), Home(claire)}
C2 = {Home(claire)}
C3 = {Home(max)}
Notice that in order for an assignment to satisfy both C1 and C2 , you will
have to satisfy the clause
C4 = {Home(max)}
Thus we can throw this resolvent C4 into our set. But when we look at
{C1 , C2 , C3 , C4 }, it is obvious that this new set of clauses cannot be satis-
fied. C3 and C4 are in direct conflict. So the original set is not tt-satisfiable.
With these examples in mind, we now define what it means for one clause,
say R, to be a resolvent of two other clauses, say C1 and C2 .
resolvent defined Definition A clause R is a resolvent of clauses C1 and C2 if there is an atomic
sentence in one of the clauses whose negation is in the other clause, and if R
is the set of all the other literals in either clause.
Here are some more examples. Assume A, B, C, and D are atomic. We use
2 as above for the empty clause.
{A, D} {A}
{D}
{A, A} {A}
{A}
{B, C} {B, D}
{C, D}
{D} {D}
2
The key fact about resolution is expressed in the following theorem. The
proof will be outlined in Exercise 17.45.
Chapter 17
Resolution / 507
A (B C B) (C D) (A D) (B D)
Our new aim is to use resolution to show that this set of clauses (and hence
the original sentence S) is not tt-satisfiable.
Successive applications of step 2 is illustrated by the following picture:
{B, C} {C, D}
{A, D} {A} {B, D} {B, D}
{D} {D}
2
Since we are able to start with clauses in S and resolve to the empty clause,
we know that the original set T of sentences is not tt-satisfiable. A figure of proof by resolution
this sort is sometimes called a proof by resolution.
A proof by resolution shows that a set of sentences, or set of clauses, is not
tt-satisfiable. But it can also be used to show that a sentence C is a tautological
consequence of premises P1 , . . . , Pn . This depends on the observation, made
earlier, that S is a consequence of premises P1 , . . . , Pn if and only if the set
{P1 , . . . , Pn , S} is not tt-satisfiable.
Remember
Section 17.4
508 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
Exercises
17.31 Open Alan Robinsons Sentences. The sentences in this file are not mutually satisfiable in any
|. world. Indeed, the first six sentences are not mutually satisfiable. Show that the first five
sentences are mutually satisfiable by building a world in which they are all true. Submit this
as World 17.31. Go on to show that each sentence from 7 on can be obtained from earlier
sentences by resolution, if we think of the disjunction in clausal form. The last sentence, 2,
is clearly not satisfiable, so this shows that the first six are not mutually satisfiable. Turn in
your resolution proof to your instructor.
17.32 Use Fitch to give an ordinary proof that the first six sentences of Alan Robinsons Sentences are
not satisfiable.
17.33 Construct a proof by resolution showing that the following CNF sentence is not satisfiable:
. (A C B) A (C B A) (A B)
17.34 Construct a proof by resolution showing that the following sentence is not satisfiable. Since the
. sentence is not in CNF, you will first have to convert it to CNF.
A (A ((B C) B)) C
17.35 Resolution can also be used to show that a sentence is logically true. To show that a sentence
. is logically true, we need only show that its negation is not satisfiable. Use resolution to show
that the following sentence is logically true:
A (B C) (A B) (A B C)
Give resolution proofs of the following arguments. Remember, a resolution proof will demonstrate that
the premises and the negation of the conclusion form an unsatisfiable set.
Chapter 17
Resolution / 509
17.42 A (B C) 17.43 A B
. E . C (D E)
(A B) (D E) D C
A A E
CD CB
17.45 (Completeness of resolution) In this exercise we outline the theorem stated in the section to
. the eect that the resolution method is complete.
1. Assume that S is a set of clauses and that the only literals appearing in clauses are A
and A. Show that if S is not satisfiable, then 2 is a resolvent of clauses in S.
2. Next, assume that S is a set of clauses and that the only literals appearing in clauses
are A, B, A, and B. Form two new sets of clauses as follows. First, form sets S B and
S B where the first of these consists of all clauses in S that do not contain B and
the second consists of all clauses in S that do not contain B. Notice that these sets
can overlap, since some clauses in S might not contain either. Assume that S is not
satisfiable, and that h is any truth assignment. Show that if h(B) = true, then h
cannot satisfy S B . Similarly, show that if h(B) = false, then h fails to satisfy S B .
3. With the same setup as above, we now form new sets of clauses SB and SB . The first
results from S B by throwing out B from any clauses that contain it. The second results
from S B by throwing out B from its clauses. Show that the observation made above
about h still holds for these new sets. Note, however, that neither B nor B appears
in any clause in either of these sets. Hence, it follows that no assignment satisfies SB
and that no assignment satisfies SB .
4. Still continuing with the same setup, show that if S is not satisfiable, then 2 can be
obtained as a resolvent of each of SB and SB . Here the result you obtained in part 1
comes into play.
5. Use this result to show that if S is not satisfiable then either 2 or {B} can be
obtained as a resolvent from S B . Show similarly that either 2 or {B} can be obtained
as a resolvent from S B .
6. Use this to show that if S is not satisfiable, then 2 can be obtained as an eventual
resolvent of S.
Section 17.4
510 / Advanced Topics in Propositional Logic
7. Now you have shown that any unsatisfiable set S of clauses built from just two atomic
sentences has 2 as an eventual resolvent. Can you see how this method generalizes to
the case of three atomic sentences? You will need to use your results for one and two
atomic sentences.
8. If you have studied the chapter on induction, complete this proof to obtain a general
proof of Theorem 17.4. Nothing new is involved except induction.
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
This chapter presents some more advanced topics in first-order logic. The first
three sections deal with a mathematical framework in which the semantics of
fol can be treated rigorously. This framework allows us to make our informal
notions of first-order validity and first-order consequence precise, and culmi-
nates in a proof of the Soundness Theorem for the full system F. The later
sections deal with unification and resolution resolution method, topics of im-
portance in computer science. The Completeness Theorem for F is taken up
in the next chapter, which does not presuppose the sections on unification
and resolution.
Section 18.1
First-order structures
In our treatment of propositional logic, we introduced the idea of logical con-
sequence in virtue of the meanings of the truth-functional connectives. We
developed the rigorous notion of tautological consequence as a precise approx-
imation of the intuitive notion. We achieved this precision thanks to truth ta-
ble techniques, which we later extended by means of truth assignments. Truth
assignments have two advantages over truth tables: First, in assigning truth
values to all atomic sentences at once, they thereby determine the truth or
falsity of every sentence in the language, which allows us to apply the concept
of tautological consequence to infinite sets of sentences. Second, they allow us
to do this with complete mathematical rigor.
In Chapter 10, we introduced another approximation of the intuitive notion
of consequence, that of first-order consequence, consequence in virtue of the
meanings of , and =, in addition to the truth-functional connectives. We
described a vague technique for determining when a sentence was a first-order
consequence of others, but did not have an analog of truth tables that gave
us enough precision to prove results about this notion, such as the Soundness
Theorem for F.
Now that we have available some tools from set theory, we can solve this
problem. In this section, we define the notion of a first-order structure. A first- first-order structures
order structure is analogous to a truth assignment in propositional logic. It
represents circumstances that determine the truth values of all of the sentences
of a language, but it does so in such a way that identity and the first-order
511
512 / Advanced Topics in FOL
quantifiers and are respected. This will allow us to give a precise definition
of first-order consequence and first-order validity.
In our intuitive explanation of the semantics of quantified sentences, we
appealed to the notion of a domain of discourse, defining truth and sat-
isfaction relative to such a domain. We took this notion to be an intuitive
one, familiar both from our experience using Tarskis World and from our
ordinary experience communicating with others about real-world situations.
The notion of a first-order structure results from modeling these domains in
a natural way using set theory.
Lets begin with a very simple language, a sublanguage of the blocks lan-
guage. Assume that we have only three predicates, Cube, Larger, and =, and
one name, say c. Even with this simple language there are infinitely many
sentences. How should we represent, in a rigorous way, the circumstances that
determine the truth values of sentences in this language?
modeling a world By way of example, consider Mary Ellens World, shown in Figure 18.1.
This world has three cubes, one of each size, and one small tetrahedron. The
small cube is named c. Our goal is to construct a mathematical object that
represents everything about this world that is relevant to the truth values
of sentences in our toy language. Later, we will generalize this to arbitrary
first-order languages.
Since sentences are going to be evaluated in Mary Ellens World, one thing
we obviously need to represent is that the world contains four objects. We do
domain of discourse this by using a set D = {b1 , b2 , b3 , b4 } of four objects, where b1 represents the
leftmost block, b2 the next, and so forth. Thus b4 represents the tetrahedron.
This set D is said to be the domain of discourse of our first-order structure.
To keep first-order structures as clean as possible, we represent only those
features of the domain of discourse that are relevant to the truth of sentences
in the given first-order language. Given our current sublanguage, there are
Chapter 18
First-order structures / 513
many features of Mary Ellens World that are totally irrelevant to the truth
of sentences. For example, since we cannot say anything about position, our
mathematical structure need not represent any facts about the positions of our
blocks. On the other hand, we can say things about size and shape. Namely,
we can say that an object is (or is not) a cube and that one object is (or is
not) larger than another. So we will need to represent these sorts of facts. We
do this by assigning to the predicate Cube a certain subset Cu of the domain
of discourse D, namely, the set of cubes. This set is called the extension of extensions of predicates
the predicate Cube in our structure. In modeling the world depicted above,
this extension is the set Cu = {b1 , b2 , b3 }. Similarly, to represent facts about
the relative sizes of the objects, we assign to the predicate Larger a set La of
ordered pairs x, y, where x, y D. If x, y La, then this represents the
fact that x is larger than y. So in our example, we would have
La = {b2 , b1 , b3 , b1 , b3 , b2 , b2 , b4 , b3 , b4 }
Section 18.1
514 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Exercises
18.1 Write out a complete description of a first-order structure M that would represent Mary Ellens
. World. This has been done above except for the packaging into a single function.
Chapter 18
First-order structures / 515
18.2 (Simon says) Open Mary Ellens World. The structure M that we have used to model this world,
with respect to the sublanguage involving only Cube, Larger, and c, is also a good model of
many other worlds. What follows is a list of proposed changes to the world. Some of them
are allowable changes, in that if you make the change, the model M still represents the world
with respect to this language. Other changes are not. Make the allowable changes, but not the
others.
1. Move everything back one row.
2. Interchange the position of the tetrahedron and the large cube.
3. Make the tetrahedron a dodecahedron.
4. Make the large cube a dodecahedron.
5. Make the tetrahedron (or what was the tetrahedron, if you have changed it) large.
6. Add a cube to the world.
7. Add a dodecahedron to the world.
Now open Mary Ellens Sentences. Check to see that all these sentences are true in the world you
have built. If they are not, you have made some unallowable changes. Submit your modified
world.
18.3 In the text we modeled Mary Ellens World with respect to one sublanguage of Tarskis World.
. How would our structure have to be modified if we added the following to the language: Tet,
Dodec, Between? That is, describe the first-order structure that would represent Mary Ellens
World, in its original state, for this expanded language. [Hint: One of your extensions will be
the empty set.]
18.4 Consider a first-order language with one binary predicate Outgrabe. Suppose for some reason
. we are interested in first-order structures M for this language which have the particular domain
{Alice, Mad Hatter }. List all the sets of ordered pairs that could serve as the extension of the
symbol Outgrabe. How many would there be if the domain had three elements?
18.5 In Section 14.4 (page 396) we promised to show how to make the semantics of generalized
. quantifiers rigorous. How could we extend the notion of a first-order structure to accommo-
date the addition of a generalized quantifier Q? Intuitively, as we have seen, a sentence like
Q x (A(x), B(x)) asserts that a certain binary relation Q holds between the set A of things that
satisfy A(x) and the set B that satisfies B(x) in M. Thus, the natural way to interpret them
is by means of a binary relation on (DM ). What quantifier corresponds to the each of the
following binary relations on sets?
1. A B
2. A B =
3. A B =
4. | A B |= 1
5. | A B | 3
6. | A B | > | A B |
Section 18.1
516 / Advanced Topics in FOL
18.6 While we cant say with precision exactly which binary relation a speaker might have in mind
. with the use of some quantifiers, like many, we can still use this framework to illustrate the
nature of the logical properties like conservativity, monotonicity, and so forth discussed in
Section 14.5. Each of the following properties of binary relations Q on subsets of D correspond
to a property of quantifiers. Identify them.
1. Q(A, B) if and only if Q(A, A B)
2. If Q(A, B) and A A then Q(A , B)
3. If Q(A, B) and A A then Q(A , B)
4. If Q(A, B) and B B then Q(A, B )
5. If Q(A, B) and B B then Q(A, B )
Section 18.2
Truth and satisfaction, revisited
Chapter 18
Truth and satisfaction, revisited / 517
4. the function g4 which is the empty function, that is, does not assign
values to any variables
The special case of the empty variable assignment g4 is important, so we empty variable
denote it by g . assignment (g )
Given a w P, we say that the variable assignment g is appropriate for P appropriate
if all the free variables of P are in the domain of g, that is, if g assigns objects assignments
to each free variable of P. Thus the four variable assignments g1 , g2 , g3 , and
g4 listed above would have been appropriate for the following sorts of ws,
respectively:
1. g1 is appropriate for any w with the single free variable x, or with no
free variables at all;
2. g2 is appropriate for any w whose free variables are a subset of {x, y, z};
Section 18.2
518 / Advanced Topics in FOL
domain is that of g plus the variable v and which assigns the same values as
g, except that the new assignment assigns b to the variable v.
Here are a couple examples, harking back to our earlier examples of vari-
able assignments given above:
1. g1 assigns b to the variable x, so g1 [y/c] assigns b to x and c to y. By
contrast, g1 [x/c] assigns a value only to x, the value c.
4. g4 , the empty function, does not assign values to any variables. Thus
g4 [x/b] is the function which assigns b to x. Notice that this is the same
function as g1 .
Notice that what variable assignments do for us is allow us to treat free
variables as if they have a temporary denotation, not one assigned by the
structure, but one assigned for purposes of the inductive definition of satisfac-
tion. Thus, if a variable assignment g is appropriate for a w P, then between
M and g, all the terms (constants and variables) in P have a denotation. For
[[t]]M
g any term t, we write [[t]]M M
g for the denotation of t. Thus [[t]]g is t
M
if t is an
individual constant and g(t) if t is a variable.
We are now in a position to define what it means for a variable assignment
g to satisfy a w P in a first-order structure M. First, it is always required
that g be appropriate for P, that is, be defined for all the free variables of P,
and maybe other free variables. Second, there is nothing at all surprising in
the following definition. There shouldnt be, anyway, since we are just trying
to make precise the intuitive idea of satisfaction of a formula by a sequence
of objects. We suggest that you work through the example at the end of the
definition, referring back to the definition as needed, rather than try to read
the definition itself right o.
definition of Definition (Satisfaction) Let P be a w and let g be an assignment in M
satisfaction which is appropriate for P.
1. The atomic case. Suppose P is R(t1 , . . . ,tn ), where R is an n-ary predi-
cate. Then g satisfies P in M if and only if the n-tuple [[t1 ]]M
g , . . . , [[tn ]]g
M
is in RM .
Chapter 18
Truth and satisfaction, revisited / 519
with the single free variable x. If the above definition is doing its stu, it
should turn out that an assignment g satisfies this w just in case g assigns
a to the variable x. After all, a is the only individual who likes someone who
does not like himself.
Lets examine the definition of satisfaction to see if this is the way it
turns out. First, note that g has to assign some value to x, since it has to be
appropriate for the formula. Let us call this value e; e is one of a, b, or c. Next,
we see from the clause for that g satisfies our w just in case there is some
object d D such that g[y/d] satisfies the w
Likes(x, y) Likes(y, y)
Section 18.2
520 / Advanced Topics in FOL
But g[y/d] satisfies this w if and only if it satisfies Likes(x, y) but does not
satisfy Likes(y, y), by the clauses for conjunction and negation. Looking at
the atomic case, we see that this is true just in case the pair e, d is in the
extension of Likes, while the pair d, d is not. But this can only happen if
e = a and d = b. Thus the only way our original g can satisfy our w is if it
assigns a to the variable x, as we anticipated.
Notice in the above example how we started o with a w with one free
variable and an assignment defined on that one variable, but in order to give
our analysis, we had to move to consider a w with two free variables and
so to assignments defined on those two free variables. This is typical. After
all, what we are really interested in is truth for sentences, that is, ws with
no free variables, but in order to define this, we must define something more
general, satisfaction of ws with free variables by assignments defined on those
variables. Indeed, having defined satisfaction, we are now in a position to look
at the special case where the ws have no free variables and use it for our
definition of truth.
definition of truth Definition (Truth) Let L be some first-order language and let M be a struc-
ture for L. A sentence P of L is true in M if and only if the empty variable
assignment g satisfies P in M. Otherwise P is false in M.
M |= P Just as we write M |= Q [g] if g satisfies a w Q in M, so too we write:
M |= P
come out as it should under this definition. First, notice that it is a sentence,
that is, has no free variables. Thus, the empty assignment is appropriate
for it. Does the empty assignment satisfy it? According to the definition of
satisfaction, it does if and only if there is an object that we can assign to the
variable x so that the resulting assignment satisfies
But we have seen that there is such an object, namely, a. So the sentence is
true in M; in symbols, M |= x y (Likes(x, y) Likes(y, y)).
Consider next the sentence
Chapter 18
Truth and satisfaction, revisited / 521
Does the empty assignment satisfy this? It does if and only if for every object
e in the domain, if we assign e to x, the resulting assignment g satisfies
Section 18.2
522 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Remember
Chapter 18
Truth and satisfaction, revisited / 523
Exercises
18.7 (Modifying variable assignments.) Suppose D = {a, b, c, d} and let g be the variable assignment
. which is defined only on the variable x and takes value b. Describe explicitly each of the
following:
1. g[y/c]
2. g[x/c]
3. g[z/b]
4. g[x/b]
5. (g[x/c])[z/d]
6. (g[x/c])[x/d]
18.8 Consider the language with only one binary predicate symbol P and let M be the structure
. with domain D = {1, 2, 3} and where the extension of P consists of those pairs n, m such
that m = n + 1. For each of the following ws, first describe which variable assignments are
appropriate for it. Then describe the variable assignments which satisfy it, much the way we
described the variable assignments that satisfy the w z Likes(x, z) on page 517.
1. P(y,z)
2. y P(y, z)
3. z P(y, z)
4. P(x,x)
5. x P(x, x)
6. x P(x, x)
7. P(x, x) P(y, z)
8. x (P(x, x) P(y, z))
9. y (P(x, x) P(y, z))
10. y z P(y, z)
11. y y P(y, z)
Now consider the structure N with the same domain but where the extension of P is the set
of those pairs n, m such that n m. How do your answers change?
18.9 Let g be a variable assignment in M which is appropriate for the w P. Show that the following
.
three statements are equivalent:
1. g satisfies P in M
2. g satisfies P in M for some extension g of g
3. g satisfies P in M for every extension g of g
Intuitively, this is true because whether a variable assignment satisfies P can depend only on
the free variables of P, but it needs a proof. What does this result say in the case where P is
a sentence? Express your answer using the concept of truth. [Hint: You will need to prove this
by induction on ws.]
Section 18.2
524 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Show that the same if and only if holds for all sentences.
18.12 (From truth assignments to first-order structures.) Let h be any truth assignment for a first-
. order language without function symbols. Construct a first-order structure Mh as follows. Let
the domain of M be the set of individual constants of the language. Given a relation symbol
R, binary lets say for simplicity of notation, define its extension to be
Mh |= S i h(S) = true
Chapter 18
Soundness for fol / 525
numbered sentences are also true. Do the same for Thoralfs Second World, saving the resulting
worlds as World 18.13.1 and World 18.13.2. Submit these worlds.
Explain under what conditions a world in which x P(x) is true can be extended to one in
which P(c) is true. Turn in your explanation to your instructor.
Section 18.3
Soundness for fol
Having made the notion of first-order consequence more precise using the
notion of first-order structure, we are now in a position to state and prove
the Soundness Theorem for fol. Given a set T of sentences we write T S
to mean there is a proof of S from premises in T in the full system F.1 As
mentioned in Chapter 17, this notation does not mean that all the sentences
in T have to be used in the formal proof of S, only that there is a proof of S
whose premises are all elements of T . In particular, the set T could be infinite
(as in the case of proofs from zfc or pa) whereas only a finite number of
premises can be used in any one proof. This notation allows us to state the
Soundness Theorem as follows.
Theorem (Soundness of F) If T S, then S is a first-order consequence of soundness of F
set T .
Proof: The proof is very similar to the proof of the Soundness The-
orem for FT , the propositional part of F, on page 217. We will show
that any sentence that occurs at any step in a proof p in F is a first-
order consequence of the assumptions in force at that step (which
include the premises of p). This claim applies not just to sentences
at the main level of proof p, but also to sentences appearing in sub-
proofs, no matter how deeply nested. The theorem follows from this
claim because if S appears at the main level of p, then the only as-
sumptions in force are premises drawn from T . So S is a first-order
consequence of T .
Call a step of a proof valid if the sentence at that step is a first-order
consequence of the assumptions in force at that step. Our earlier
proof of soundness for FT was actually a disguised form of induction
on the number of the step in question. Since we had not yet discussed
induction, we disguised this by assuming there was an invalid step
1 Recall that the formal proof system F includes all the introduction and elimination
rules, but not the Con procedures.
Section 18.3
526 / Advanced Topics in FOL
and considering the first of these. When you think about it, you
see that this is really just the inductive step in an inductive proof.
Assuming we have the first invalid step allows us to assume that all
the earlier steps are valid, which is the inductive hypothesis, and
then prove (by contradiction) that the current step is valid after all.
We could proceed in the same way here, but we will instead make
the induction explicit. We thus assume that we are at the nth step,
that all earlier steps are valid, and show that this step is valid as
well.
The proof is by cases, depending on which rule is applied at step
n. The cases for the rules for the truth-functional connectives work
out pretty much as before. We will look at one, to point out the
similarity to our earlier soundness proof.
Elim: Suppose the nth step derives the sentence R from an appli-
cation of Elim to sentences Q R and Q appearing earlier in the
proof. Let A1 , . . . , Ak be a list of all the assumptions in force at step
n. By our induction hypothesis we know that Q R and Q are both
established at valid steps, that is, they are first-order consequences
of the assumptions in force at those steps. Furthermore, since F only
allows us to cite sentences in the main proof or in subproofs whose
assumptions are still in force, we know that the assumptions in force
at steps Q R and Q are also in force at R. Hence, the assump-
tions for these steps are among A1 , . . . , Ak . Thus, both Q R and
Q are first-order consequences of A1 , . . . , Ak . We now show that R is
a first-order consequence of A1 , . . . , Ak .
Suppose M is a first-order structure in which all of A1 , . . . , Ak are
true. Then we know that M |= Q R and M |= Q, since these sen-
tences are first-order consequences of A1 , . . . , Ak . But in that case,
by the definition of truth in a structure we see that M |= R as well.
So R is a first-order consequence of A1 , . . . , Ak . Hence, step n is a
valid step.
Notice that the only dierence in this case from the corresponding
case in the proof of soundness of FT is our appeal to first-order
structures rather than rows of a truth table. The remaining truth-
functional rules are all similar. Lets now consider a quantifier rule.
Elim: Suppose the nth step derives the sentence R from an appli-
cation of Elim to the sentence x P(x) and a subproof containing
R at its main level, say at step m. Let c be the new constant intro-
Chapter 18
Soundness for fol / 527
..
.
j. x P(x)
..
.
c P(c)
..
.
m. R
..
.
..
.
n. R
Section 18.3
528 / Advanced Topics in FOL
The Soundness Theorem for F assures us that we will never prove an in-
valid argument using just the rules of F. It also warns us that we will never be
able to prove a valid argument whose validity depends on meanings of pred-
icates other than identity. The Completeness Theorem for F is significantly
harder to prove than the Soundness Theorem for F, or for that matter, than
the Completeness Theorem for FT . In fact, it is the most significant theorem
that we prove in this book and forms the main topic of Chapter 19.
Exercises
18.14 Prove the inductive step in the sound- 18.15 Prove the inductive step in the sound-
. ness proof corresponding to the rule . ness proof corresponding to the rule
Intro. Intro.
18.16 Prove the inductive step in the sound- 18.17 Prove the inductive step in the sound-
. ness proof corresponding to the rule . ness proof corresponding to the rule
Intro. Intro.
Section 18.4
The completeness of the shape axioms
In Section 12.5 (on page 348), we promised to convince you that the ten
axioms we gave for shape are complete, that is, that they completely bridged
the gap between first-order consequence and the intuitive notion of logical
consequence for the blocks language, as far as shape is concerned. We list the
axioms again here for your convenience:
1. x (Cube(x) Tet(x))
2. x (Tet(x) Dodec(x))
3. x (Dodec(x) Cube(x))
Chapter 18
The completeness of the shape axioms / 529
We need to show that any argument that is logically valid in virtue of the
meanings of the shape predicates (and the first-order quantifiers, connectives,
and identity) is first-order valid once we add these ten axioms as premises.
To show this, it suces to show that any first-order structure M making the
axioms true is just like one where the meanings of the four shape predicates
is as intended.2
The reason this suces is not hard to see. For suppose we have an argument
A that is valid in virtue of the meanings of the shape predicates. We want to
show that the result A of adding the ten axioms gives us an argument that is
first-order valid. To do this, it suces to show that any first-order structure M
making the original premises and the ten axioms true is just like a structure
M where the predicates mean what they should. Hence, by the presumed
validity of the argument A in the latter such structures, the conclusion holds
in M . But since M is just like M , the conclusion also holds in M. Hence,
since the structure M was an arbitrary one making the original premises and
the ten axioms true, this will show that A is first-order valid.
So now let us prove our claim about M and M . Recall that M is any
first-order structure making our ten shape axioms true. Let Cu, Do, and T e
be the extensions in M of Cube, Dodec, and Tet, respectively. Axiom 1 insures
that Cu and T e are disjoint. Similarly, by Axioms 2 and 3, all three of the
sets are disjoint from the others. Axiom 4 insures us that everything in the
domain D of M is in one of these three sets.
Recall from Exercise 15.47 that a partition of D is a set P of non-empty
subsets of D with the property that every element of D is in exactly one
member of P. As we saw in that exercise, every such partition is the set of
equivalence classes of an equivalence relation, the relation of being in the same
member of the partition. This applied directly to our setting. Not all of these
sets Cu, Do and T e need be non-empty, but if we restrict attention to those
that are, the preceding paragraph shows that we have a partition of D.
2 What just like means here is that the structures are isomorphic, a notion we have
not defined. The intuitive notion should be enough to convince you of our claim.
Section 18.4
530 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Exercises
18.18 Let M be the structure whose domain 18.19 Let M be any first-order structure mak-
. is the natural numbers, where Cube, . ing the first four shape axioms true.
Dodec, and Tet have as extensions the Prove that there is a unique way to in-
sets of natural numbers of the forms 3n, terpret SameShape so as to make all ten
3n + 1, and 3n + 2. Can we interpret axioms true.
SameShape so as to make the ten shape
axioms true? If so, in how many ways
can we do this?
Section 18.5
Skolemization
x y Neighbor(x, y)
M |= Neighbor(x, y)[b, c]
rather than the more formal M |= Neighbor(x, y)[g] where g is the variable
assignment that assigns b to x and c to y. Now if the original quantified
sentence is true, then we can pick out, for each b, one of bs neighbors, say his
Chapter 18
Skolemization / 531
Now, we would like to say the following: if we had a function symbol f ex-
pressing our function f.
M |= x Neighbor(x, f(x))
This would reduce the quantifier string x y in the original sentence to the
simpler x. So we need to expand our first-order language and give ourselves
such a function symbol f to use as a name of f .
This important trick is known as Skolemization, after the Norwegian lo- Skolemization
gician Thoralf Skolem. The function f is called a Skolem function for the Skolem function
original quantified sentence. The new sentence, the one containing the func-
tion symbol but no existential quantifier, is called the Skolem normal form of Skolem normal form
the original sentence.
Notice that we did not say that a sentence is logically equivalent to its
Skolemization. The situation is a little more subtle than that. If our language
allowed existential quantification to apply to function symbols, we could get
a logically equivalent sentence, namely
f x P(x, f(x))
Section 18.5
532 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Remember
Exercises
18.20 Discuss the logical relationship between 18.21 Skolemize the following sentence using
. the following two sentences. [Hint: One . the function symbol f.
is a logical consequence of the other, but
they are not logically equivalent.] z y [(1 + (z z)) < y]
y z ParentOf(z, y) Which of the following functions on nat-
y ParentOf(bestfriend(y), y) ural numbers could be used as a Skolem
Explain under what conditions the sec- function for this sentence?
ond would be a Skolemization of the 1. f (z) = z 2
first. 2. f (z) = z 2 + 1
3. f (z) = z 2 + 2
4. f (z) = z 3
Section 18.6
Unification of terms
We now turn to a rather dierent topic, unification, that applies mainly to
languages that contain function symbols. Unification is of crucial importance
when we come to extend the resolution method to the full first-order language.
The basic idea behind unification can be illustrated by comparing a couple
of claims. Suppose first that Nancy tells you that Maxs father drives a Honda,
and that no ones grandfather drives a Honda. Now this is not true, but there is
nothing logically incompatible about the two claims. Note that if Nancy went
on to say that Max was a father (so that Maxs father was a grandfather)
Chapter 18
Unification of terms / 533
Definition Terms t1 and t2 are unifiable if there is a substitution of terms for definition of
some or all of the variables in t1 and t2 such that the terms that result from unifiable terms
the substitution are syntactically identical terms.
Section 18.6
534 / Advanced Topics in FOL
If you said to substitute h(a) for the variable x and g(z) for y you were right.
All three terms are transformed into the term f(g(z), h(a)). Are there any
other substitutions that would work? Yes, there are. We could plug any term
in for z and get another substitution. The one we chose was the simplest in
most general unifiers that it was the most general. We could get any other from it by means of a
substitution.
Here are some examples of pairs, some of which can, others of which can-
not, be unified. See if you can tell which are which before reading on.
g(x), h(y)
h(f(x, x)), h(y)
f(x, y), f(y, x)
g(g(x)), g(h(y))
g(x), g(h(z))
g(x), g(h(x))
Half of these go each way. The ones that are unifiable are the second, third,
and fifth. The others are not unifiable. The most general unifiers of the three
that are unifiable are, in order:
The first pair is not unifiable because no matter what you do, one will always
start with g while the other starts with h. Similarly, the fourth pair is not
unifiable because the first will always start with a pair of gs, while the second
will always start with a g followed by an h. (The reason the last pair cannot
be unified is a tad more subtle. Do you see why?)
There is a very general procedure for checking when two (or more) terms
Unification Algorithm are unifiable or not. It is known as the Unification Algorithm. We will not
explain it in this book. But once you have done the following exercises, you
will basically understand how the algorithm works.
Chapter 18
Resolution, revisited / 535
Exercises
18.22 Which of the following terms are unifi- 18.23 Which of the following terms are unifi-
. able with father(x) and which are not? . able with f(x, g(x)) and which are not?
If they are, give the substitution. If they If they are, give the most general uni-
are not, then explain why not. fier. If they are not, then explain why
1. Max not. (Here, as usual, a and b are names,
2. father(Claire) not variables.)
3. mother(Max) 1. f(a, a)
4. father(mother(Claire)) 2. f(g(a), g(a))
5. father(mother(y)) 3. f(g(x), g(g(x)))
6. father(mother(x)) 4. h(f(a, g(a)))
5. f(f(a, b), g(f(a, b)))
18.24 Find a set of four terms which can si- 18.25 Show that there are an infinite number
. multaneously be unified to obtain the . of dierent substitutions that unify the
following term: following pair of terms. Find one that is
most general.
h(f(h(a), g(a)))
g(f(x, y)), g(f(h(y), g(z)))
Section 18.7
Resolution, revisited
In this section we discuss in an informal way how the resolution method for
propositional logic can be extended to full first-order logic by combining the extending resolution
tools we have developed above. to fol
The general situation is that you have some first-order premises P1 , . . . , Pn
and a potential conclusion Q. The question is whether Q is a first-order con-
sequence of P1 , . . . , Pn . This, as we have seen, is the same as asking if there
is no first-order structure which is a counterexample to the argument that
Q follows from P1 , . . . , Pn . This in turn is the same as asking whether the
sentence
P1 . . . Pn Q
Section 18.7
536 / Advanced Topics in FOL
x1 . . . xn P(x1 , . . . , xn )
For simplicity, let us suppose that there are just two quantifiers:
x y P(x, y)
Lets assume that P contains just two names, b and c, and, importantly, that
there are no function symbols in P.
We claim that S is fo-satisfiable if and only if the following set T of
quantifier-free sentences is fo-satisfiable:
Note that we are not saying the two are equivalent. S obviously entails T , so
if S is fo-satisfiable so is T . T does not in general entail S, but it is the case
that if T is fo-satisfiable, so is S. The reason is fairly obvious. If you have a
structure that makes T true, look at the substructure that just consists of b
and c and the relationships they inherit. This little structure with only two
objects makes S true.
reducing to This neat little observation allows us to reduce the question of the un-
non-quantified satisfiability of the universal sentence S to a sentence of fol containing no
sentences quantifiers, something we know how to solve using the resolution method for
propositional logic.
caveats There are a couple of caveats, though. First, since the resolution method
for propositional logic gives us truth-assignments, in order for our proof to
work must be able to go from a truth-assignment h for the atomic sentences
of our language to a first-order structure Mh for that language making the
same atomic sentences true. This works for sentences that do not contain =,
as we saw in Exercise 18.12, but not in general. This means that in order to
be sure our proof works, the sentence S cannot contain =.
Chapter 18
Resolution, revisited / 537
Exercise 18.12 also required that the sentence not contain any function
symbols. This is a real pity, since Skolemization gives us a method for taking Skolemizing
any prenex sentence S and finding another one that is universal and fo-
satisfiable if and only if S is: just replace all the s one by one, left to right, by
function symbols. So if we could only generalize the above method to the case
where function symbols are allowed, we would have a general method. This is
where the Unification Algorithm comes to the rescue. The basic strategy of
resolution from propositional logic has to be strengthened a bit.
Resolution method for fol: Suppose we have sentences S, S , S , . . . and resolution method
want to show that they are not simultaneously fo-satisfiable. To do this using for fol
resolution, we would carry out the following steps:
x1 y1 x2 y2 . . . P(x1 , y1 , x2 , y2 , . . . )
P1 P2 . . . Pn
Rather than explain this in great detail, which would take us beyond the
scope of this book, lets look at a few examples.
Section 18.7
538 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Example. Suppose you want to show that x P(x, b) and y P(f(y), b) are
not jointly fo-satisfiable, that is, that their conjunction is not fo-satisfiable.
With this example, we can skip right to step 6, giving us two clauses, each
consisting of one literal. Since we can unify x and f(y), we see that these two
clauses resolve to 2.
Example. Suppose we are told that the following are both true:
x (P(x, b) Q(x))
y (P(f(y), b) Q(y))
and we want to derive the sentence,
y (Q(y) Q(f(y)))
Chapter 18
Resolution, revisited / 539
Example. Lets look at one more example that shows the whole method at
work. Consider the two English sentences:
1. Everyone admires someone who admires them unless they admire
Quaid.
2. There are people who admire each other, at least one of whom admires
Quaid.
Suppose we want to use resolution to show that under one plausible reading of
these sentences, (2) is a first-order consequence of (1). The readings we have
in mind are the following, writing A(x, y) for Admires(x, y), and using q for the
name Quaid:
(S1 ) x [A(x, q) y (A(x, y) A(y, x))]
(S2 ) x y [A(x, q) A(x, y) A(y, x)]
(When you figure out why S1 logically entails S2 in Problem 18.27, you may
decide that these are not reasonable translations of the English. But that is
beside the point here.)
Our goal is to show that S1 and S2 are not jointly fo-satisfiable. The
sentence S2 is equivalent to the following universal sentence, by DeMorgans
Laws:
x y (A(x, q) A(x, y) A(y, x))
The sentence S1 is not logically equivalent to a universal sentence, so we
must Skolemize it. First, note that it is equivalent to the prenex form:
Putting the quantifier-free part of this in conjunctive normal form gives us:
Section 18.7
540 / Advanced Topics in FOL
Exercises
18.27 Give an informal proof that S2 is a log- 18.28 Give an informal proof that the sentence
. ical consequence of S1 . . given as a prenex form of S1 really is
logically equivalent to it.
Chapter 18
Resolution, revisited / 541
18.29 There are usually many ways to proceed 18.30 Use the resolution method to show that
. in resolution. In our derivation of 2 in . the following sentence is a logical truth:
the last two examples, we chose optimal
derivations. Work out dierent deriva- x (P(x) y P(y))
tions for both.
Section 18.7
Chapter 19
Completeness and
Incompleteness
542
The Completeness Theorem for fol / 543
Section 19.1
The Completeness Theorem for fol
The first few sections of this chapter are devoted to giving a complete proof
of the Godel Completeness Theorem just referred to. We use the terms the-
ory and set of sentences interchangeably. (Some authors reserve the term theories
theory for a set of first-order sentences which is closed under provability,
that is, satisfying the condition that if T S then S T .) In this section we
write T S to mean there is a proof of S from the theory T in the full system T S
F.1 As mentioned in Chapter 17, this notation does not mean that all the
sentences in T have to be used in the formal proof of S, only that there is
a proof of S whose premises are all elements of T . In particular, the set T
could be infinite (as in the case of proofs from zfc or pa) whereas only a finite
number of premises can be used in any one proof. This notation allows us to
state the Completeness Theorem as follows.
Theorem (Completeness Theorem for F). Let T be a set of sentences of a Completeness Theorem
first-order language L and let S be a sentence of the same language. If S is a for F
first-order consequence of T , then T S.
Exactly as in the case of propositional logic, we obtain the following as an
immediate consequence of the Completeness Theorem.
Theorem (Compactness Theorem for fol). Let T be a set of sentences of Compactness Theorem
a first-order language L. If for each finite subset of T there is a first-order
structure making this subset of T true, then there is a first-order structure
M that makes all the sentences of T true.
The Completeness Theorem for fol was first established by Kurt Godel, as
we mentioned above. The proof of the Completeness Theorem for first-order
consequence is, as we shall see, considerably subtler than for tautological
consequence. The proof we give here is simpler than Godels original, though,
and is based on a proof known as the Henkin method, named after the logician Henkin method
Leon Henkin who discovered it.
Recall from Section 10.1 that the truth table method is too blunt to take
account of the meaning of either the quantifiers and or the identity symbol
1 Recall that the formal proof system F includes all the introduction and elimination
rules, but not the Con procedures.
Section 19.1
544 / Completeness and Incompleteness
Henkin theory (H) The Henkin theory: We next isolate a particular theory H in the enriched
language LH . This theory consists of various sentences which are not
tautologies but are theorems of first-order logic, plus some additional
sentences known as Henkin witnessing axioms. The latter take the form
x P(x) P(c) where c is a witnessing constant. The particular constant
is chosen carefully so as to make the Henkin Construction Lemma and
Elimination Theorem (described next) true.
Elimination Theorem The Elimination Theorem: The Henkin theory is weak enough, and the
formal system F strong enough, to allow us to prove the following (The-
orem 4): Let p be any formal first-order proof whose premises are all ei-
ther sentences of L or sentences from H, with a conclusion that is also a
sentence of L. We can eliminate the premises from H from this proof in
favor of uses of the quantifier rules. More precisely, there exists a formal
proof p whose premises are those premises of p that are sentences of L
and with the same conclusion as p.
Henkin construction The Henkin Construction: On the other hand, the Henkin theory is strong
enough, and the notion of first-order structure wide enough, to allow us
to prove the following result (Theorem 19.5): for every truth assignment
2 This remark will be further illustrated by Exercises 19.319.5, 19.17 and 19.18, which
we strongly encourage you to do when you get to them. They will really help you understand
the whole proof.
Chapter 19
Adding witnessing constants / 545
Section 19.2
Adding witnessing constants
Given any first-order language K, we construct a new first-order language K .
The language K will have the same symbols as K except that it will have a
lot of new constant symbols. For example, if K is our blocks language, then
in K will be able to say things like the following:
1. x (Small(x) Cube(x)) Small(c1 ) Cube(c1 )
2. z (z = a z = b) (c2 = a c2 = b)
3. y Between(y, a, b) Between(c3 , a, b)
4. x y Between(a, x, y) y Between(a, c4 , y)
More generally, for each w P of L with exactly one free variable, form a new
constant symbol cP , making sure to form dierent names for dierent ws.
This constant is called the witnessing constant for P. witnessing constant
3 In this chapter we are using the notions of tautology and tautological consequence for P
defined in Section 10.1, in which every sentence starting with a quantifier is treated as
atomic.
Section 19.2
546 / Completeness and Incompleteness
You might wonder just how we can form all these new constant symbols.
How do we write them down and how do we make sure that distinct ws
get distinct witnessing constants? Good question. There are various ways we
could arrange this. One is simply to use a single symbol c not in the language
K and have the new symbol be the expression c with the w as a subscript.
Thus, for example, in our above list, the constant symbol c1 would really be
the symbol
c(Small(x)Cube(x))
This is a pretty awkward symbol to write down, but it at least shows us how
we could arrange things in principle.
the language K The language K consists of all the symbols of K plus all these new wit-
nessing constants. Now that we have all these new constant symbols, we can
use them in ws. For example, the language K allows us to form sentences
like
Smaller(a, cBetween(x,a,b) )
But then we also have sentences like
x Smaller(x, cBetween(x,a,b) )
Smaller(x, cBetween(x,a,b) )
L0 L1 L2 . . .
where L0 = L and Ln+1 = Ln . That is, the language Ln+1 results by applying
the Henkin language the above construction to the language Ln . Finally, the Henkin language LH
LH for L consists of all the symbols of Ln for any n = 0, 1, 2, 3, . . ..
Each witnessing constant cP is introduced at a certain stage n 1 of this
date of birth of construction. Let us call that stage the date of birth of cP . When we come to
witnessing constants proving the Elimination Theorem it will be crucial to remember the following
fact, which is obvious from the construction of LH .
Chapter 19
The Henkin theory / 547
Exercises
19.1 This exercise and its companion (Exercise 19.2) are intended to give you a better feel for why
. we have to keep iterating the witnessing constant construction. It deals with the constants that
would turn out to be important if our original set T contained the sentence x y Larger(x, y).
Write out the witnessing constants for the following ws, keeping track of their dates of birth.
The constant symbol a is taken from the original language L.
1. Larger(a, x)
2. Larger(c1 , x), where c1 is your constant from 1.
3. Larger(c2 , x), where c2 is your constant from 2.
4. Larger(c3 , x), where c3 is your constant from 3.
Section 19.3
The Henkin theory
We have added witnessing constants for each w P with exactly one free
variable. The free variable of P is going to be important in what follows so we
often write the w in a way that reminds us of the free variable, namely, as
P(x).4 Consequently, its witnessing constant is now denoted by cP(x) . Notice
that by iterating our construction infinitely often, we have managed to arrange
things so that for each w P(x) of LH with exactly one free variable, the
witnessing constant cP(x) is also in LH . This allows us to form the sentence
x P(x) P(cP(x) )
in LH . This sentence is known as the Henkin witnessing axiom for P(x). The witnessing axioms
intuitive idea is that x P(x) P(cP(x) ) asserts that if there is something that
satisfies P(x), then the object named by cP(x) provides an example (or wit-
ness) of one such.
language, not just the variable x. We are using x here as a representative variable of our
language.
Section 19.3
548 / Completeness and Incompleteness
Henkin theory H Definition The Henkin theory H consists of all sentences of the following five
forms, where c and d are any constants and P(x) is any formula (with exactly
one free variable) of the language LH :
H1: All Henkin witnessing axioms
x P(x) P(cP(x) )
P(c) x P(x)
x P(x) x P(x)
(P(c) c = d) P(d)
connection to Notice that there is a parallel between these sentences of H and the quan-
quantifier rules tifier and identity rules of F:
H1 corresponds roughly to Elim, in that both are justified by the
same intuition,
H2 corresponds to Intro,
H3 reduces to ,
H5 corresponds to = Elim.
Just what this correspondence amounts to is a bit dierent in the various cases.
For example, the axioms of types H2-H5 are all first-order validities, while this
is not true of H1, of course. The witnessing axioms make substantive claims
about the interpretations of the witnessing constants. The following result,
while not needed in the proof of completeness, does explain why the rest of
the proof has a chance of working.
Chapter 19
The Henkin theory / 549
Exercises
19.2 Write out the witnessing axioms associated with the ws in Exercise 19.1.
.
The next three exercises are designed to help you understand how the theory H fills the gap between
tautological and first-order consequence. For these exercises we take L to be the blocks language and T
to consist of the following set of sentences:
19.3 Give informal proofs that both of the 19.4 Give informal proofs that none of the
. following are first-order consequences of . following is a tautological consequence
T: of T :
1. x (Cube(x) Small(x)) 1. x (Cube(x) Small(x))
2. y Dodec(y) 2. y Dodec(y)
3. Dodec(cDodec(y) )
Section 19.3
550 / Completeness and Incompleteness
19.6 Use Tarskis World to open Henkins Sentences. Take the constants c and d as shorthand for
|. the witnessing constant cCube(x) and cDodec(x)Small(x) , respectively.
1. Show that these sentences are all members of H. Identify the form of each axiom from
our definition of H.
2. By (1) and Proposition 3, any world in which c and d are not used as names can be
turned into a world where all these sentences are true. Open Henkins World. Name some
blocks c and d in such a way that all the sentences are true. Submit this world.
19.7 Show that for every constant symbol c of LH there is a distinct witnessing constant d such
. that c = d is a tautological consequence of H. [Hint: consider the w c = x.]
19.8 Show that for every binary relation symbol R of L and all constants c, c , d, and d of LH , the
. following is a tautological consequence of H:
(R(c, d) c = c d = d ) R(c , d )
19.9 Let T be a theory of L. Use Proposition 3 (but without using the Completeness Theorem or
. the Elimination Theorem) to show that if a sentence S of L is a first-order consequence of
T H, then it is a first-order consequence of T alone.
Section 19.4
The Elimination Theorem
Elimination Theorem Proposition 4. (The Elimination Theorem) Let p be any formal first-order
proof with a conclusion S that is a sentence of L and whose premises are
sentences P1 , . . . , Pn of L plus sentences from H. There exists a formal proof
p of S with premises P1 , . . . , Pn alone.
Chapter 19
The Elimination Theorem / 551
The proof of this result will take up this section. We break the proof down
into a number of lemmas.
Proposition 5. (Deduction Theorem). If T {P} Q then T P Q Deduction Theorem
The proof of this is very similar to the proof of Lemma 2 from chapter 17
(page 487) and is left as an exercise. It is also illustrated by the following.
You
. . . . . try
. . . . .it. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Open Deduction Thm 1. This contains a formal first-order proof of the
following argument:
Section 19.4
552 / Completeness and Incompleteness
two simple facts Lemma 7. Let T be a set of first-order sentences of some first-order language
L, and let P, Q, and R be sentences of L.
1. If T P Q and T P Q then T Q.
2. If T (P Q) R then T P R and T Q R.
P P
PQ
P Q
Q
The following lemma shows how certain constants in proofs can be replaced
by quantifiers, using the rule of Elim.
replacing constants Lemma 8. Let T be a set of first-order sentences of some first-order language
with quantifiers L and let Q be a sentence. Let P(x) be a w of L with one free variable and
which does not contain c. If T P(c) Q and c does not appear in T or Q,
then T x P(x) Q.
Chapter 19
The Elimination Theorem / 553
Lemma 9. Let T be a set of first-order sentences of some first-order language eliminating witnessing
L and let Q be a sentence of L. Let P(x) be a w of L with one free variable axioms
which does not contain c. If T {x P(x) P(c)} Q and c does not appear
in T or Q, then T Q.
T (x P(x) P(c)) Q
By (2) of Lemma 7,
T x P(x) Q
and
T P(c) Q
Lemma 10. Let P(x) be a w with one free variable, and let c and d be eliminating other
constant symbols. The following are all provable in F: members of H
P(c) x P(x)
x P(x) x P(x)
(P(c) c = d) P(d)
c=c
Section 19.4
554 / Completeness and Incompleteness
Proof: The only one of these that is not quite obvious from the
rules of inference of F is the DeMorgan biconditional. We essentially
proved half of this biconditional on page 364, and gave you the other
half as Exercise 13.44.
We have now assembled the tools we need to prove the Elimination The-
orem.
proof of Elimination Proof of the Elimination Theorem. Let k be any natural number
Theorem and let p be any formal first-order proof of a conclusion in L, all of
whose premises are all either sentences of L or sentences from H, and
such that there are at most k from H. We show how to eliminate
those premises that are members of H. The proof is by induction
on k. The basis case is where k = 0. But then there is nothing to
eliminate, so we are done. Let us assume the result for k and prove
it for k + 1. The proof breaks into two cases.
Case 1: At least one of the premises to be eliminated, say P, is
of one of the forms mentioned in Lemma 10. But then P can be
eliminated by Lemma 6 giving us a proof with at most k premises
to be eliminated, which we can do by the induction hypothesis.
Case 2: All of the premises to be eliminated are Henkin witnessing
axioms. The basic idea is to eliminate witnessing axioms introducing
young witnessing constants before eliminating their elders. Pick the
premise of the form x P(x) P(c) whose witnessing constant c is
as young as any of the witnessing constants mentioned in the set of
premises to be eliminated. That is, the date of birth n of c is greater
than or equal to that of any of witnessing constants mentioned in
the premises. This is possible since there are only finitely many such
premises. By the independence lemma, c is not mentioned in any of
the other premises to be eliminated. Neither is c mentioned in the
conclusion. By Lemma 9, x P(x) P(c) can be eliminated. This
gets us to a proof with at most k premises to be eliminated, which
we can do by our induction hypothesis.
Exercises
19.10 If you skipped the You try it section, go back and do it now. Submit the file Proof Deduction
Thm 1.
Chapter 19
The Elimination Theorem / 555
Give formal proofs of the following arguments. Because these results are used in the proof of Complete-
ness, do not use any of the Con rules in your proofs.
19.14 Prove the Deduction Theorem (Proposition 5). [Hint: The proof of this is very similar to the
. proof of Lemma 2 from chapter 17 (on page 487).]
19.15 Prove Proposition 6. [Hint: Use induction on n and the Deduction Theorem.]
.
19.16 Use Fitch to open Exercise 19.16. Here you will find a first-order proof of the following argument:
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x y (x = y)
Cube(b) x Small(x)
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x y (x = y)
y Cube(y) x Small(x)
19.17 Open Exercise 19.17. This file contains the following argument:
x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x Cube(x)
x Cube(x) Cube(c)
Small(c) x Small(x)
(Cube(c) Small(c)) x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x (Cube(x) Small(x)) x (Cube(x) Small(x))
x Small(x)
First use Taut Con to show that the conclusion is a tautological consequence of the premises.
Having convinced yourself, delete this step and give a proof of the conclusion that uses only
the propositional rules.
Section 19.4
556 / Completeness and Incompleteness
19.18 Open Exercise 19.17 again. Take the constant c as shorthand for the witnessing constant cCube(x) .
Take T to be the first two premises of this proof. We saw in Exercise 19.6 that the other
sentences are all members of H. The Elimination Theorem thus applies to show that you could
transform your proof from the preceding exercise into a proof from the first two premises, one
that does not need the remaining premises. Open Exercise 19.18 and give such a proof. [If you
were to actually transform your previous proof, using the method we gave, the result would be
a very long proof indeed. Youll be far better o giving a new, direct proof.]
Section 19.5
The Henkin Construction
Proposition 3 allows us to take any first-order structure for L and get from it
one for LH that makes all the same sentences true. This, of course, gives rise
to a truth assignment h to all the sentences of LH that respects the truth-
functional connectives: just assign true to all the sentences that are true
in the structure, false to the others. (You may recall that you were asked
to prove this in Exercise 18.11.) The main step in the Henkin proof of the
Completeness Theorem is to show that we can reverse this process.
Henkin Construction Theorem (Henkin Construction Lemma) Let h be any truth assignment for
Lemma LH that assigns true to all the sentences of the Henkin theory H. There is a
first-order structure Mh such that Mh |= S for all sentences S assigned true
by the assignment h.
In giving the proof of this result, we will assume that our language L
contains only relation symbols and constants, no function symbols. We will
return at the end to explain how to modify the proof if there are function
symbols. The proof of this theorem has two parts. We must first show how
to construct Mh from h and then show that Mh does indeed make true all
constructing Mh the sentences to which h assigned true. To construct Mh , we must do three
things. We must define the domain D of Mh , we must assign to each n-ary
relation symbol R some set R of n-tuples from D, and we must assign to
each name c of LH some element of D. We first give the basic idea of the
construction. This idea wont quite work, so it will have to be modified, but
its useful to see the flawed idea before digging into the details that correct
the flaw.
The basic (flawed) idea in constructing the first-order structure M is to
use the construction of Exercise 18.12, but to count on the fact that h assigns
true to all the sentences in H to get us past the quantifiers. In more detail,
we build M as follows:
Chapter 19
The Henkin Construction / 557
From this it follows that we can associate with each constant c its equiv-
alence class
[c] = {d | c d}
This allows us to define our desired first-order structure Mh : definition of Mh
The domain D of our desired first-order structure Mh is the set of all
such equivalence classes.
Section 19.5
558 / Completeness and Incompleteness
We now need to prove that Mh makes true all and only the sentences to
which h assigns true. That is, we need to show that for any sentence S of
LH , Mh |= S if and only if h(S) = true. The natural way to prove this is by
induction on the complexity of the sentence S.
For the atomic case, we have basically built Mh to guarantee that our claim
holds. But there is one important thing we need to check. Suppose we have
distinct constants c and c , and d and d , where [c] = [c ] and [d] = [d ]. We need
to rule out the possibility that h(R(c, d)) = true and h(R(c , d )) = false.
For if this were the case, [c ], [d ] would be in the extension of R (since
[c], [d] is, and these are the same), and consequently Mh would assign the
wrong value to the atomic sentence R(c , d )! But this situation is impossible,
as is shown by the following lemma.
(R(c, d) c = c d = d ) R(c , d )
This lemma assures us that our construction of Mh works for the atomic
sentences. That is, Mh will make an atomic sentence true if and only if h
assigns true to that atomic sentence. The proof of the Henkin Construction
Lemma will be completed by proving the full version of this result.
the crucial lemma Lemma 13. For any sentence S of LH , Mh |= S if and only if h(S) = true.
Chapter 19
The Henkin Construction / 559
w complexity
Small(x) 0
(x = a) 0
(x = a) 1
Small(x) (x = a) 2
(Small(x) (x = a)) 3
x (Small(x) (x = a)) 4
x (Small(x) (x = a)) 5
Section 19.5
560 / Completeness and Incompleteness
P(c) x P(x)
so h assigns this sentence true. But then, by the truth table for ,
h assigns true to x P(x), as desired.
The reverse direction of this case is very similar, but it uses the
Henkin witnessing axiom for P(x). Here is how it goes. Assume that
h assigns true to x P(x). We need to show that Mh |= x P(x). But
recall that h assigns true to the witnessing axiom
x P(x) P(cP(x) )
x P(x) x P(x)
From this it follows that h assigns false to x P(x) and hence true
to x P(x), as desired. The proof in the other direction is entirely
similar.
Chapter 19
The Henkin Construction / 561
is in H, it is not hard to check that all the details of the proof then
work out pretty much without change.
This completes our filling in of the outline of the proof of the Completeness
Theorem.
Exercises
19.19 Use Tarskis World to open Henkin Construction. This file lists eight sentences. Lets suppose
|. that the predicates used in these sentences (Cube, Dodec, and Small) exhaust the predicates of
L. (In particular, we banish = to avoid the complications it caused in the proof of the Henkin
Construction Lemma.) Let h be any truth assignment that assigns true to all these sentences.
Describe the first-order structure Mh . (How many objects will it have? What will they be
called? What shape and size predicates will hold of them?) Use Tarskis World to build a world
that would be represented by this first-order structure. There will be many such. It should, of
course, make all the sentences in this list true. Submit your world.
19.20 Show that all sentences of the following forms are tautological consequences of H:
. 1. c = c
2. c = d d = c
3. (c = d d = e) c = e
19.21 What are the complexities of the following ws, where complexity is measured as in the proof
. of the Henkin Construction Lemma?
1. Cube(y)
2. y = x
3. Cube(y) y = x
4. y (Cube(y) y = x)
5. x y (Cube(y) y = x)
6. y = cy(Cube(y)y=x)
7. y (Cube(y) y = cy(Cube(y)y=x) )
19.22 In the inductive proof of Lemma 13, Case 1 considered only one of the truth-functional con-
. nectives, namely, . Give an analogous proof that covers the case where S is of the form P Q.
19.23 In the inductive proof of Lemma 13, Case 3 considered only one direction of the biconditional
. for . Prove the other direction.
Section 19.5
562 / Completeness and Incompleteness
Section 19.6
The L
owenheim-Skolem Theorem
One of the most striking things about the proof of completeness is the na-
the structure Mh ture of the first-order structure Mh . Whereas our original language may be
talking about physical objects, numbers, sets, what-have-you, the first-order
structure Mh that we construct by means of the Henkin construction has as
elements something quite dierent: equivalence classes of constant symbols.
This observation allows us to exploit the proof to establish something known
as the Lowenheim-Skolem Theorem for fol.
Recall from our discussion of infinite sets in Chapter 15 that there are
dierent sizes of infinite sets. The smallest infinite sets are those that have
the same size as the set of natural numbers, those that can be put in one-to-
one correspondence with the natural numbers. A set is countable if it is finite
or is the same size as the set of natural numbers. Digging into the details of
the proof of completeness lets us prove the following important theorem, due
originally to the logicians Lowenheim and Skolem. They proved it before Godel
proved the Completeness Theorem, using a very dierent method. Lowenheim
proved it for single sentences, Skolem proved it for countably infinite sets of
sentences.
L
owenheim-Skolem Theorem (L owenheim-Skolem Theorem) Let T be a set of sentences in a
Theorem countable language L. Then if T is satisfied by a first-order structure, it is
satisfied by one whose domain is countable.
Chapter 19
wenheim-Skolem Theorem / 563
The Lo
Section 19.6
564 / Completeness and Incompleteness
Section 19.7
The Compactness Theorem
2. M also contains elements greater than all the natural numbers, but
3. M makes true exactly the same sentences of L as are true about the
natural numbers.
Proof: (Sketch) The proof of this result is fairly easy using the
Compactness Theorem. The language of Peano arithmetic, as we
defined it in Chapter 16, did not contain a symbol for greater than,
but we can define x > y by the w z (z = 0 x = y + z). To say that
an element n of M is greater than all the natural numbers is to say
that n satisfies all the ws:
Chapter 19
The Compactness Theorem / 565
x > 0
x > 1
x > 1+1
x > (1 + 1) + 1
..
.
Let T consist of all sentences of L that are true of the natural num-
bers. Let n be a new constant symbol and let S be the set consisting
of the following sentences:
n > 0
n > 1
n > 1+1
n > (1 + 1) + 1
..
.
Section 19.7
566 / Completeness and Incompleteness
what nonstandard intended domain of discourse using just axioms stated in the first-order lan-
models show guage of arithmetic. With first-order axioms, we cant rule out the existence
of natural numbers (that is, members of the domain) that are infinitely far
from zero. The distinction between being finitely far from zero, which holds
of all the genuine natural numbers, and being infinitely far from zero, which
holds of elements like n from the proof, is not one that we can make in the
first-order language.
We can recast this result by considering what would happen if we added
to our language a predicate NatNum, with the intended meaning is a natu-
ral number. If we did nothing to supplement the deductive system F, then
it would be impossible to add sucient meaning postulates to capture the
meaning of this predicate or to prove all the consequences expressible using
the predicate. For example, if we take the set T = T S from the proof above,
then intuitively the sentence NatNum(n) is a consequence of T . There can,
however, be no proof of this in F.
What would happen if we added new rules to F involving the predicate
NatNum? Could we somehow strengthen F in some way that would allow us
to prove NatNum(n) from T ? The answer is that if the strengthened proof
system allows only finite proofs and is sound with respect to the intended
structure, then our attempt is doomed to fail. Any proof of NatNum(n) would
use only finitely many premises from T . This finite subset is satisfiable in the
natural numbers: just assign n to a large enough number. Consequently, by the
soundness of the extended proof system, NatNum(n) must not be provable
from this finite subset.
While these observations are about the natural numbers, they show some-
thing very general about any language that implicitly or explicitly expresses
the concept of finiteness. For example, if the language of set theory is sup-
plemented with a predicate with the intended meaning is a finite set, the
Compactness Theorem can be used to show that there are first-order struc-
tures in which this predicate applies to infinite sets, no matter what meaning
postulates we specify for the new predicate.
For a more down-to-earth example, we could consider the first-order lan-
guage for talking about family relations. If this language has a predicate mean-
ing is an ancestor of, then however we try to capture its meaning with axioms,
we will fail. Implicit in the concept ancestor is the requirement that there are
only finitely many intermediate relatives. But since there is no fixed, finite
limit to how distant an ancestor can be, the Compactness Theorem guaran-
tees that there will be structures allowing infinitely distant ancestors.
These examples are explored in Exercises 19.30 and 19.31.
Chapter 19
The Compactness Theorem / 567
Exercises
Submit your Tarskis World file and turn in your informal argument to your instructor. There
is no need to submit a Fitch file.
The next three exercises refer to the following list of sentences. In each exercise, give an informal
argument justifying your answer.
19.25 How large is the 19.26 Show that any 19.27 Is there an infinite
. largest first-order . structure making . structure making
structure making 14 and 6 true is 13 and 5 true?
15 true? infinite.
19.28 Let T be a set of first-order sentences. Suppose that for any natural number n, there is a
. structure whose domain is larger than n that satisfies T . Use the Compactness Theorem to
show that there is a structure with an infinite domain that satisfies T . [Hint: Consider the
sentences that say there are at least n things, for each n.]
19.29 Let L be the language of Peano arithmetic augmented with the predicate NatNum, with the
. intended interpretation is a natural number. Let T be the set of sentences in this language that
are true of the natural numbers. Let S be as in the proof of the non-standard model theorem.
Show that NatNum(n) is not a first-order consequence of T S.
Section 19.7
568 / Completeness and Incompleteness
19.30 Suppose we add the monadic predicate Finite to the first-order language of set theory, where
. this is meant to hold of all and only finite sets. Suppose that T consists of the axioms of
zfc plus new axioms involving this predicate, insisting only that the axioms are true in the
intended universe of sets. Use the Compactness Theorem to show that there is a first-order
structure satisfying T and containing an element c which satisfies Finite(x) but has infinitely
many members. [Hint: Add to the language a constant symbol c and infinitely many constants
b1 , b2 , . . .. Form a theory S that says that the bs are all dierent and all members of c. Show
that T S is satisfiable.]
19.31 Use the Compactness Theorem to show that the first-order language with the binary predicates
. Par(x, y) and Anc(x, y), meaning parent of and ancestor of, respectively, is not axiomatizable.
That is, there is no set of meaning postulates, finite or infinite, which characterize those first-
order structures which represent logically possible circumstances. [Hint: The crucial point is
that a is an ancestor of b if and only if there is some finite chain linking a to b by the parent
of relation, but it is logically possible for that chain to be arbitrarily long.]
Section 19.8
The G
odel Incompleteness Theorem
The theorem showing the existence of nonstandard models of arithmetic shows
a kind of incompleteness of fol. There is, however, a far deeper form of in-
completeness that was discovered by Kurt Godel a few years after he proved
the Completeness Theorem. This is the famous result known as Godels In-
completeness Theorem.
Students are sometimes puzzled by the fact that Godel first proved some-
completeness vs. thing called the Completeness Theorem, but then turned around and proved
incompleteness the Incompleteness Theorem. Couldnt he make up his mind? Actually, though,
the senses of completeness involved in these two theorems are quite dierent.
Recall that the Completeness Theorem tells us that our formal rules of proof
adequately capture first-order consequence. The Incompleteness Theorem, by
contrast, involves the notion of formal completeness introduced earlier. Re-
member that a theory T is said to be formally complete if for any sentence S of
its language, either S or S is provable from T . (We now know, by soundness
and completeness, that this is equivalent to saying that either S or S is a
first-order consequence of T .)
In the early part of the twentieth century, logicians were analyzing mathe-
matics by looking at axiomatic theories like Peano arithmetic and formal proof
systems like F. The aim was to come up with a formally complete axiomati-
zation of arithmetic, one that allowed us to prove all and only the sentences
Chapter 19
del Incompleteness Theorem / 569
The Go
that were true of the natural numbers. This was part of an ambitious project
that came to be known as Hilberts Program, after its main proponent, David Hilberts Program
Hilbert. By the early 1930s a great deal of progress had been made in Hilberts
Program. All the known theorems about arithmetic had been shown to follow
from relatively simple axiomatizations like Peano arithmetic. Furthermore,
the logician Mojzesz Pressburger had shown that any true sentence of the
language not mentioning multiplication could be proven from the relevant
Peano axioms.
Godels Incompleteness Theorem showed the positive progress was mis-
leading, and that in fact the goal of Hilberts Program could never be accom-
plished. A special case of Godels theorem can be stated as follows:
Theorem (Godels Incompleteness Theorem for pa) Peano Arithmetic is not G
odels Incompleteness
formally complete. Theorem
The proof of this theorem, which we will describe below, shows that the
result applies far more broadly than just to Peanos axiomatization, or just to
the particular formal system F. In fact, it shows that no reasonable extension
of either of these will give you a formally complete theory of arithmetic, in a
sense of reasonable that can be made precise.
Well try to give you a general idea how the proof goes. A key insight idea of proof
is that any system of symbols can be represented in a coding scheme like
Morse code, where a sequence of dots and dashes, or equivalently, 0s and 1s,
is used to represent any individual symbol of the system. With a carefully
designed coding system, any string of symbols can be represented by a string coding system
of 0s and 1s. But we can think of such a sequence as denoting a number in
binary notation. Hence, we can use natural numbers to code strings of our
basic symbols. The first thing Godel established was that all of the important
syntactic notions of first-order logic can be represented in the language of representability
Peano arithmetic. For example, the following predicates are representable:
n is the code of a w,
n is the code of a sentence,
n is the code of an axiom of Peano arithmetic,
n and m are codes of sentences, the second of which follows from the
first by an application of Elim,
n is the code of a proof in F,
n is the code of a proof of the sentence whose code is m.
Section 19.8
570 / Completeness and Incompleteness
prove all and only the true instances of these predicates. So if p is a proof of
S and n and m are their codes, then the formal version of the last sentence
on our list would actually be a first-order consequence of the Peano axioms.
A lot of careful work has to be done to show that these notions are rep-
resentable in Peano arithmetic, work that is very similar to what you have
to do to implement a system like F on a computer. (Perhaps Godel was the
worlds first real hacker.) But it is possible, and fairly routine once you get
the hang of it.
Godels second key insight was that it is possible to get sentences that
express facts about themselves, relative to the coding scheme. This is known
Diagonal Lemma as the Diagonal Lemma. This lemma states that for any w P(x) with a single
free variable, it is possible to find a number n that codes the sentence P(n)
asserting that n satisfies P(x). In other words, P(n) can be thought of as
asserting
Depending on what property P expresses, some of these will be true and some
false. For example, the formal versions of
and
and
are false.
Now consider the formal version of the following sentence, whose existence
the Diagonal Lemma guarantees:
the G
odel sentence G This sentence (the one above, not this one) is called G, after Godel. Lets show
that G is true but not provable in pa.
Chapter 19
del Incompleteness Theorem / 571
The Go
Let us now show that G is not provable in pa. We have already shown
that G is true. But then, given what it claims, G is not provable.
n encodes an axiom of T
Exercises
19.32 Godels Incompleteness Theorem was inspired by the famous Liars Paradox, the sentence This
. sentence is not true.
1. Let us assume that this sentence makes an unambiguous claim. Show that the claim
is true if and only if it is not true.
2. Conclude that the sentence must not be making an unambiguous claim.
3. One possibility for locating the ambiguity is in a shift in the domain of discourse as
the argument proceeds. Discuss this suggestion.
Section 19.8
572 / Completeness and Incompleteness
19.33 (Undefinability of Truth) Show that the following predicate cannot be expressed in the language
. of arithmetic:
n is the code of a true sentence.
This is a theorem due to Alfred Tarski. [Hint: Assume it were expressible. Apply the Diagonal
Lemma to obtain a sentence which says of itself that it is not true.]
19.34 (Lobs Paradox) Consider the sentence If this conditional is true, then logic is the most fasci-
. nating subject in the world. Assume that the sentence makes an unambiguous claim.
1. Use the method of conditional proof (and modus ponens) to establish the claim.
2. Use modus ponens to conclude that logic is the most fascinating subject in the world.
Chapter 19
Summary of Rules
P1 P1 . . . Pi . . . Pn
..
.
Pn Pi
..
.
P1 . . . Pn
Pi P1 . . . Pn
.. ..
. .
P1 . . . Pi . . . Pn P1
..
.
S
Pn
..
.
S
..
.
S
573
574 / Summary of Rules
P P
..
.. .
. P
P
Introduction Elimination
( Intro) ( Elim)
P
.. ..
. .
P P
..
.
P PQ
..
.
..
. P
..
Q .
PQ Q
Summary of Rules
First-order rules (F ) / 575
P P Q (or Q P)
..
.. .
. P
Q ..
.
Q Q
..
.
P
PQ
Reiteration
(Reit)
P
..
.
P
n=n P(n)
..
.
n=m
..
.
P(m)
First-order rules (F )
576 / Summary of Rules
c P(c) x S(x)
..
.
.. S(c)
.
Q(c)
x (P(x) Q(x))
Universal Introduction
( Intro)
..
.
P(c)
x P(x)
S(c) x S(x)
.. ..
. .
x S(x) c S(c)
..
.
Q
Q
Summary of Rules
Inference Procedures (Con Rules) / 577
Induction rules
Tautological Consequence
(Taut Con)
Taut Con allows you to infer any sentence that follows from the cited sen-
tences in virtue of the meanings of the truth-functional connectives alone.
First-order Consequence
(FO Con)
FO Con allows you to infer any sentence that follows from the cited sentences
in virtue of the meanings of the truth-functional connectives, the quantifiers
and the identity predicate.
Analytic Consequence
(Ana Con)
In theory, Ana Con should allow you to infer any sentence that follows
Summary of Rules
Glossary
Arity: The arity of a predicate indicates the number of arguments (in the
second sense of the word) it takes. A predicate with arity of one is called
unary. A predicate with an arity of two is called binary. Its possible for
a predicate to have any arity, so we can talk about 6-ary or even 113-ary
predicates.
Atomic sentences: Atomic sentences are the most basic sentences of fol,
those formed by a predicate followed by the right number (see arity) of
names (or complex terms, if the language contains function symbols).
Atomic sentences in fol correspond to the simplest sentences of English.
579
580 / Glossary
Glossary
Glossary / 581
Glossary
582 / Glossary
Determiner: Determiners are words such as every, some, most, etc., which
combine with common nouns to form quantified noun phrases like every
dog, some horses, and most pigs.
{y D | x, y R}
Glossary
Glossary / 583
Glossary
584 / Glossary
Inductive proof: Inductive proofs are used to establish claims about induc-
tively defined sets. Given such a set, to prove that some property holds
of every element of that set we need a basis step, which shows that
the property holds of the basic elements, and an inductive step, which
shows that if the property holds of some elements, then it holds of any
elements generated from them by the inductive clauses. See Inductive
definition.
Intersection (): The operation on sets a and b that returns the set a b
whose members are those objects common to both a and b.
Lemma: A lemma is a claim that is proven, like a theorem, but whose pri-
mary importance is for proving other claims. Lemmas are of less intrinsic
interest than theorems. (See Theorem.)
Glossary
Glossary / 585
Logical equivalence: Two sentences are logically equivalent if they have the
same truth values in all possible circumstances.
Modus ponens: The Latin name for the rule that allows us to infer Q from
P and P Q. Also known as Elimination.
Glossary
586 / Glossary
Glossary
Glossary / 587
the scope of the quantifier extends only over P(x) Q(x). If we were to
add another set of parentheses, e.g.,
the scope of the quantifier would extend over the entire sentence.
Glossary
588 / Glossary
Glossary
Glossary / 589
Truth table: Truth tables show the way in which the truth value of a sen-
tence built up using truth-functional connectives depends on the truth
values of the sentences components.
Union (): The operation on sets a and b that returns the set a b whose
members are those objects in either a or b or both.
Variable: Variables are expressions of fol that function somewhat like pro-
nouns in English. They are like individual constants in that they may
be the arguments of predicates, but unlike constants, they can be bound
by quantifiers. Generally letters from the end of the alphabet, x, y, z,
etc., are used for variables.
Glossary
File Index
590
File Index / 591
File Index
592 / File Index
Universal 2, 354
File Index
Exercise Index
593
594 / Exercise Index
Exercise Index
General Index
595
596 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 597
General Index
598 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 599
General Index
600 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 601
General Index
602 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 603
General Index
604 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 605
General Index
606 / General Index
General Index
General Index / 607
General Index