In mathematical logic, a predicate variable is a predicate letter which functions as a "placeholder" for a relation (between terms), but which has not been specifically assigned any particular relation (or meaning). Common symbols for denoting predicate variables include capital roman letters such as , and , or lower case roman letters, e.g., .[1] In first-order logic, they can be more properly called metalinguistic variables. In higher-order logic, predicate variables correspond to propositional variables which can stand for well-formed formulas of the same logic, and such variables can be quantified by means of (at least) second-order quantifiers.

Notation

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Predicate variables should be distinguished from predicate constants, which could be represented either with a different (exclusive) set of predicate letters, or by their own symbols which really do have their own specific meaning in their domain of discourse: e.g. .

If letters are used for both predicate constants and predicate variables, then there must be a way of distinguishing between them. One possibility is to use letters W, X, Y, Z to represent predicate variables and letters A, B, C,..., U, V to represent predicate constants. If these letters are not enough, then numerical subscripts can be appended after the letter in question (as in X1, X2, X3).

Another option is to use Greek lower-case letters to represent such metavariable predicates. Then, such letters could be used to represent entire well-formed formulae (wff) of the predicate calculus: any free variable terms of the wff could be incorporated as terms of the Greek-letter predicate. This is the first step towards creating a higher-order logic.

Usage

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If the predicate variables are not defined as belonging to the vocabulary of the predicate calculus, then they are predicate metavariables, whereas the rest of the predicates are just called "predicate letters". The metavariables are thus understood to be used to code for axiom schema and theorem schemata (derived from the axiom schemata).

Whether the "predicate letters" are constants or variables is a subtle point: they are not constants in the same sense that are predicate constants, or that are numerical constants.

If "predicate variables" are only allowed to be bound to predicate letters of zero arity (which have no arguments), where such letters represent propositions, then such variables are propositional variables, and any predicate logic which allows second-order quantifiers to be used to bind such propositional variables is a second-order predicate calculus, or second-order logic.

If predicate variables are also allowed to be bound to predicate letters which are unary or have higher arity, and when such letters represent propositional functions, such that the domain of the arguments is mapped to a range of different propositions, and when such variables can be bound by quantifiers to such sets of propositions, then the result is a higher-order predicate calculus, or higher-order logic.

See also

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  • Functional predicate – Symbol representing a mathematical concept
  • Metavariable – Variable that stores data about other variables or program structure
  • Propositional variable – Variable that can either be true or false

References

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  1. ^ "Predicate variable - Encyclopedia of Mathematics". encyclopediaofmath.org. Retrieved 2020-08-20.

Bibliography

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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

First-order logic

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Predicate (logic)

truth. Free variables and bound variables Hypostatic abstraction Multigrade predicate Opaque predicate Philosophical predication Predicate functor logic

Propositional variable

{\displaystyle \gamma } . Propositional variables with no object variables such as x and y attached to predicate letters such as Px and xRy, having instead

Universal quantification

domain. It asserts that a predicate within the scope of a universal quantifier is true of every value of a predicate variable. It is usually denoted by

Second-order logic

notable that while we have variables for predicates in second-order-logic, we don't have variables for properties of predicates. We cannot say, for example

Existential quantification

by the logical operator symbol ∃, which, when used together with a predicate variable, is called an existential quantifier ("∃x" or "∃(x)" or "(∃x)"), read

Plural quantification

defined as Predicate symbols F {\displaystyle F} , G {\displaystyle G} , etc. (with appropriate arities, which are left implicit) Singular variable symbols

Well-formed formula

In mathematical logic, propositional logic, and predicate logic, a well-formed formula, abbreviated WFF or wff, often simply formula, is a finite sequence