Herbrand structure

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In mathematical logic, Herbrand's theorem is a basic result of Jacques Herbrand from the 1920s. For a language \mathcal{L}, define the Herbrand universe to be the set of closed terms (alternatively ground terms) of \mathcal{L}.

A structure \mathfrak{M} for \mathcal{L} is an Herbrand structure if the domain of \mathfrak{M} is the Herbrand universe of \mathcal{L}. This fixes the domain of \mathfrak{M}, and so each Herbrand structure can be identified with its interpretation, leading to the alternative nomenclature of Herbrand interpretation.

A Herbrand model of a theory T is a Herbrand structure which is a model of T.

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This article incorporates material from Herbrand structure on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the GFDL.