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Implicational formulas in intuitionistic logic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2014

Alasdair Urquhart*
Affiliation:
University of Toronto, Clarkson, Ontario, Canada

Extract

In [1] Diego showed that there are only finitely many nonequivalent formulas in n variables in the positive implicational propositional calculus P. He also gave a recursive construction of the corresponding algebra of formulas, the free Hilbert algebra In on n free generators. In the present paper we give an alternative proof of the finiteness of In, and another construction of free Hilbert algebras, yielding a normal form for implicational formulas. The main new result is that In is built up from n copies of a finite Boolean algebra. The proofs use Kripke models [2] rather than the algebraic techniques of [1].

Let V be a finite set of propositional variables, and let F(V) be the set of all formulas built up from V ⋃ {t} using → alone. The algebra defined on the equivalence classes , by setting

is a free Hilbert algebra I(V) on the free generators . A set TF(V) is a theory if ⊦pA implies AT, and T is closed under modus ponens. For T a theory, T[A] is the theory {BABT}. A theory T is p-prime, where pV, if pT and, for any AF(V), AT or ApT. A theory is prime if it is p-prime for some p. Pp(V) denotes the set of p-prime theories in F(V), P(V) the set of prime theories. TP(V) is minimal if there is no theory in P(V) strictly contained in T. Where X = {A1, …, An} is a finite set of formulas, let XB be A1 →····→·AnB (ϕ → B is B). A formula A is a p-formula if p is the right-most variable occurring in A, i.e. if A is of the form Xp.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 1974

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References

REFERENCES

[1] Diego, A., Sur les algébres de Hilbert, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, 1966.Google Scholar
[2] Kripke, S., Semantical analysis of intuitionistic logic. I, Formal systems and recursive functions (Crossley, J. N. and Dummett, M. A. E., Editors), North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1965.Google Scholar