In mathematical logic, a theory (also called a formal theory) is a set of sentences in a formal language. The individual sentences of a theory are called its theorems. Theories generally take the form:
:
{t1, t2, ... ,
tn}A first-order theory is a set of first-order sentences. A deductive theory requires that the theory be closed under logical consequence.
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When defining theories for foundational purposes, additional care must be taken and normal set-theoretic language may not be appropriate.
The construction of a theory begins by specifying a definite
non-empty conceptual class
,
the elements of which are called statements. These initial
statements are often called the primitive elements or
elementary statements of the theory, to distinguish them
from other statements which may be derived from them.
A theory
is a conceptual class consisting of certain of these elementary
statements. The elementary statements which belong to
are called the elementary theorems of
and said to be true. In this way, a theory is a way of
designating a subset of
which consists entirely of true statements.
This general way of designating a theory stipulates that the
truth of any of its elementary statements is not known without
reference to
.
Thus the same elementary statement may be true with respect to one
theory, and not true with respect to another. This is as in
ordinary language, where statements such as "He is a terrible
person." cannot be judged to be true or false without reference to
some interpretation of who "He" is and for that matter what a
"terrible person" is under this theory. [1]
We can define a theory
1 as being a subtheory of another
or as being an extension or supertheory of
another using the notation of set theory.
1
,
and likewise
1
If every elementary theorem of
1 is also one of
[1]
A theory is said to be a deductive theory if
is an inductive class. That is, that its content is based on some
formal deductive
system and that some of its elementary statements are taken as
axioms. In
a deductive theory, any sentence which is a logical
consequence of one or more of the axioms is also a sentence of
that theory.[1]
A syntactically consistent theory is a theory from which not every sentence in the underlying language can be proved (with respect to some deductive system which is usually clear from context). In a deductive system (such as first-order logic) that satisfies the principle of explosion, this is equivalent to requiring that there is no sentence φ such that both φ and its negation can be proved from the theory.
A satisfiable theory is a theory that has a model. This means there is a structure M that satisfies every sentence in the theory. Any satisfiable theory is syntactically consistent, because the structure satisfying the theory will satisfy exactly one of φ and the negation of φ, for each sentence φ.
A consistent theory is sometimes defined to be a syntactically consistent theory, and sometimes defined to be a satisfiable theory. For first-order logic, the most important case, it follows from the completeness theorem that the two meanings coincide. In other logics, such as second-order logic, there are syntactically consistent theories that are not satisfiable, such as ω-inconsistent theories.
A complete
consistent theory (or just a complete theory)
is a consistent theory T such that for
every sentence φ in its language, either φ is provable from
T or T
{φ} is inconsistent. For theories closed under logical consequence,
this means that for every sentence φ, either φ or its negation is
contained in the theory. An incomplete theory is a
consistent theory that is not complete.
See also ω-consistent theory for a stronger notion of consistency.
An interpretation of a theory is the relationship between a theory and some contensive subject matter when there is a many-to-one correspondence between certain elementary statements of the theory, and certain contensive statements related to the subject matter. If every elementary statement in the theory has a contensive correspondent it is called a full interpretation, otherwise it is called a partial interpretation.[2]
Each structure has several associated theories. The complete theory of a structure A is the set of all first-order sentences over the signature of A which are satisfied by A. It is denoted by Th(A). More generally, the theory of K, a class of σ-structures, is the set of all first-order σ-sentences that are satisfied by all structures in K, and is denoted by Th(K). Clearly Th(A) = Th({A}). These notions can also be defined with respect to other logics.
For each σ-structure A, there are several associated
theories in a larger signature σ' that extends σ by adding one new
constant symbol for each element of the domain of A. (If
the new constant symbols are identified with the elements of
A which they represent, σ' can be taken to be σ
A.) The cardinality of σ' is thus the larger of the cardinality of
σ and the cardinality of A.
The diagram of A consists of all atomic or negated atomic σ'-sentences that are satisfied by A and is denoted by diagA. The positive diagram of A is the set of all atomic σ'-sentences which A satisfies. It is denoted by diag+A. The elementary diagram of A is the set eldiagA of all first-order σ'-sentences that are satisfied by A or, equivalently, the complete (first-order) theory of the natural expansion of A to the signature σ'.
A first-order theory is a set of sentences (which we shall call
in a first-order formal language (which we shall call
).
There are many formal derivation ("proof") systems for first-order logic.
A formula A is a syntactic
consequence of a first-order theory
if there is a derivation in
of 'A from the set Γ. Such a formula is also
called a theorem of
.
The notation "
"
indicates A is a theorem of 
An interpretation of a first-order theory provides a semantics
for the formulas of the theory. An interpretation is said to
satisfy a formula if the formula is true according to the
interpretation. A model of a first order theory
is an interpretation in which every formula of
is satisfied.
A first order theory
is a first-order theory with identity if
includes the identity relation symbol "=" and the reflexivity and
substitution axiom schemes for this symbol.
One way to specify a theory is to define a set of axioms in a particular language. The theory can be taken to include just those axioms, or their logical or provable consequences, as desired. Theories obtained this way include ZFC and Peano arithmetic.
A second way to specify a theory is to begin with a structure and then let the theory be the set of formulas that are satisfied by the structure. This is one method for producing complete theories, described below. Examples of theories of this sort include the sets of true sentences in the structures (N, +, ×, 0, 1, =) and (R, +, ×, 0, 1, =), where N is the set of natural numbers and R is the set of real numbers. The first of these, called the theory of true arithmetic, cannot be written as the set of logical consequences of any enumerable set of axioms. The theory of (R, +, ×, 0, 1, =) was shown by Tarski to be decidable; it is the theory of real closed fields.
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