This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (September 2025) |
In mathematical logic, the quantifier rank of a formula is the depth of nesting of its quantifiers. It plays an essential role in model theory.
The quantifier rank is a property of the formula itself (i.e. the expression in a language). Thus two logically equivalent formulae can have different quantifier ranks, when they express the same thing in different ways.
Definition
In first-order logic
Let be a first-order formula. The quantifier rank of , written , is defined as:
- , if is atomic.
- .
- .
- .
- .
Remarks
- We write for the set of all first-order formulas with .
- Relational (without function symbols) is always of finite size, i.e. contains a finite number of formulas.
- In prenex normal form, the quantifier rank of is exactly the number of quantifiers appearing in .
In higher-order logic
For fixed-point logic, with a least fixed-point operator : .
Examples
- A sentence of quantifier rank 2:
- A formula of quantifier rank 1:
- A formula of quantifier rank 0:
- A sentence in prenex normal form of quantifier rank 3:
- A sentence, equivalent to the previous, although of quantifier rank 2:
See also
- Ehrenfeucht–Fraïssé game
wikipedia, wiki, encyclopedia, book, library, article, read, free download, Information about Quantifier rank, What is Quantifier rank? What does Quantifier rank mean?