Leibniz operator
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One of the cornerstone concepts in the theory of abstract algebraic logic is that of the Leibniz operator.
[edit] Motivation
The Leibniz operator was introduced by Willem Blok and Don Pigozzi, two of the founders of the field, as a means to abstract the well-known Lindenbaum-Tarski process, that leads to the association of Boolean algebras to classical propositional calculus, and make it applicable to as wide a variety of sentential logics as possible. It is an operator that assigns to a given theory of a given sentential logic, perceived as a free algebra with a consequence operation on its universe, the largest congruence on the algebra that is compatible with the theory.
[edit] Formulation
In this article, we introduce the Leibniz operator in the special case of classical propositional calculus, then we abstract it to the general notion applied to an arbitrary sentential logic and, finally, we summarize some of the most important consequences of its use in the theory of abstract algebraic logic.
Let
denote the classical propositional calculus. According to the classical Lindenbaum-Tarski process, given a theory T of , if denotes the binary relation on the set of formulas of , defined by
- if and only if
where denotes the usual classical propositional equivalence connective, then turns out to be a congruence on the formula algebra. Furthermore, the quotient is a Boolean algebra and every Boolean algebra may be formed in this way.
Thus, the variety of Boolean algebras, which is, in Abstract Algebraic Logic terminology, the equivalent algebraic semantics (algebraic counterpart) of classical propositional calculus, is the class of all algebras formed by taking appropriate quotients of free algebras by those special kinds of congruences.
The condition
that defines is equivalent to the condition
if and only if .
Passing now to an arbitrary sentential logic
given a theory T, the Leibniz congruence associated with T is denoted by Ω(T) and is defined, for all , by
- φΩ(T)ψ
if and only if, for every formula containing a variable x and possibly other variables in the list , and all formulas forming a list of the same length as that of , we have that
if and only if .
It turns out that this binary relation is a congruence relation on the formula algebra and, in fact, may alternatively be characterized as the largest congrunece on the formula algebra that is compatible with the theory T, in the sense that if φΩ(T)ψ and , then we must have also . It is this congruence that plays the same role as the congruence used in the traditional Lindenbaum-Tarski process described above in the context of an arbitrary sentential logic.
It is not, however, the case that for arbitrary sentential logics the quotients of the free algebras by these Leibniz congruences over different theories yield all algebras in the class that forms the natural algebraic counterpart of the sentential logic. This phenomenon occurs only in the case of "nice" logics and one of the main goals of Abstract Algebraic Logic is to make this vague notion of a logic being "nice", in this sense, mathematically precise. The Leibniz operator
- Ω
is the operator that maps a theory T of a given logic to the Leibniz congruence
- Ω(T),
that is associated with the theory. Thus, formally,
is a mapping from the collection
- of the theories of a sentential logic
to the collection
- ConFm
of all congruences on the formula algebra Fm of the sentential logic.
[edit] Hierarchy
The Leibniz operator and the study of various of its properties that may or may not be satisfied for particular sentential logics have given rise to what is now known as the abstract algebraic hierarchy or Leibniz hierarchy of sentential logics. Logics are classified in various steps of this hierarchy depending on how strong a tie exists between the logic and its algebraic counterpart. The properties of the Leibniz operator that help classify the logics are monotonicity, injectivity, continuity and commutativity with inverse substitutions. For instance, protoalgebraic logics, forming the widest class in the hierarchy, i.e., the one that lies in the bottom of the hierarchy and contains all other classes, are characterized by the monotonicity of the Leibniz operator on their theories. Other famous classes are formed by the equivalential logics, the weakly algebraizable logics, the algebraizable logics etc.
By now, there is a generalization of the Leibniz operator in the context of Categorical Abstract Algebraic Logic, that makes it possible to apply a wide variety of techniques that were previously applicable in the sentential logic framework to logics formalized as π-institutions. The π-institution framework is significantly wider in scope than the framework of sentential logics because it allows incorporating multiple signatures and quantifies in the language and it provides a mechanism for handling logics that are not syntactically-based.