Model Theory of Monadic Predicate Logic with the Infinity Quantifier (1809.03262v1)
Abstract: This paper establishes model-theoretic properties of $\mathrm{FOE}{\infty}$, a variation of monadic first-order logic that features the generalised quantifier $\exists\infty$ (`there are infinitely many'). We provide syntactically defined fragments of $\mathrm{FOE}{\infty}$ characterising four different semantic properties of $\mathrm{FOE}{\infty}$-sentences: (1) being monotone and (2) (Scott) continuous in a given set of monadic predicates; (3) having truth preserved under taking submodels or (4) invariant under taking quotients. In each case, we produce an effectively defined map that translates an arbitrary sentence $\varphi$ to a sentence $\varphi{p}$ belonging to the corresponding syntactic fragment, with the property that $\varphi$ is equivalent to $\varphi{p}$ precisely when it has the associated semantic property. Our methodology is first to provide these results in the simpler setting of monadic first-order logic with ($\mathrm{FOE}$) and without ($\mathrm{FO}$) equality, and then move to $\mathrm{FOE}{\infty}$ by including the generalised quantifier $\exists\infty$ into the picture. As a corollary of our developments, we obtain that the four semantic properties above are decidable for $\mathrm{FOE}{\infty}$-sentences. Moreover, our results are directly relevant to the characterisation of automata and expressiveness modulo bisimilirity for variants of monadic second-order logic. This application is developed in a companion paper.