On conceptual completeness of syntactic-semantical systems (Q798654)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | On conceptual completeness of syntactic-semantical systems |
scientific article |
Statements
On conceptual completeness of syntactic-semantical systems (English)
0 references
1985
0 references
The aim of the paper is to give a uniform formulation of several types of logics describing the relation between their syntax and semantics by means of category theory, representating the syntax by suitable algebras rather than by certain categories. The notion of a syntactic-semantical system (SS-system) is defined within the framework of 2-categories to consist of the following data: - a 2-category L - the syntax of the system, its objects are called theories, morphisms between theories are called interpretations and morphisms between interpretations are called modifications; - an arbitrary ''reasonable'' category X - the base category of the system, together with the constant functor \(E=E_ X\) fixing X from \(L^ o\) (the dual of L - interpretations are reversed, modifications saved) to CAT (the 2-category of locally small categories); - a 2-faithful 2-functor \(Mod:L^ o\to CAT\) - the semantics of the system, together with a pointwise faithful natural transformation \(\Omega:Mod\to E\) (for a theory T, \(\Omega_ T:Mod T\to X\) is the forgetful functor from the category of models of T to X). Thus \(T\mapsto <Mod T,\Omega_ T>\) converts Mod into a 2-faithful 2- functor \(<Mod,\Omega >:L^ o\to Con X\) (the 2-category of concrete categories over X) frequently denoted simply by Mod. An SS-system is called (weakly) conceptually complete if the localizations \(Mod_{T,S}:L(T,S)\to Con X(Mod S,Mod T)\) define a system of (equivalences) isomorphisms of categories natural in S, T. Further the concept of conditional conceptual completeness with respect to a preservation condition is introduced. The representation of equational theories of clones and of first-order theories by cylindric algebras and discovering the 2-categorical structure in their categories enables to subsume the equational and the first-order logics as well as ''linear logic'' (rings and modules over them) under this unifying scope. The notion of conceptual completeness enables to obtain a qualitative disctinction between them: The equational logic as well as the ''linear logic'' are conceptually complete while the first-order logic is not. All the same, it is conditionally conceptually complete with respect to the preservation condition given by the ultraproduct construction.
0 references
syntactic-semantical system
0 references
2-category
0 references
syntax
0 references
theories
0 references
interpretations
0 references
modifications
0 references
semantics
0 references
natural transformation
0 references
models
0 references
concrete categories
0 references
conceptual completeness
0 references
preservation
0 references
equational theories
0 references
clones
0 references
first-order theories
0 references
cylindric algebras
0 references
linear logic
0 references
equational logic
0 references
ultraproduct
0 references