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It is “first order” in the sense of not quantifying over subsets/predicates/relations. Nothing more than that is meant.
It’s a very standard and well-established notion. See Johnstone’s “Elephant” book on topos theory for more information.
Also note that the class of geometric formulas is extremely interesting for reasons concerning base change: The truth of geometric formulas is preserved under pullback by geometric morphisms; this is detailed in the article you linked to.
If you don’t care about topos theory, here is a more explicit way to state a related result. Recall that any modal operator gives rise to a translation of formulas. For instance, the well-known modal operator gives rise to the double-negation translation, and the operator gives rise to Friedman’s -translation. (Here, a model operator should satisfy the following axioms: , , and . This is, in a somewhat different language, detailed at Lawvere-Tierney topology.)
The result is the following: If is a geometric formula, then , i.e. all ’s appearing in the -translation may be pulled to the front.
If this terminology, standard and well-established in topos theory and related schools of thought, is not recognized in some parts of the community such as, I gather from #1, classical abstract model theory, then it would still be good to have a warning remark in the entry saying just this, for clarification. Something like
Remark: While this terminology is standard in … beware that there is another convention in …
Might any of the experts here have the energy to briefly add something like this to entry? That would be nice.
What exactly is your objection? The red herring principle perhaps?
OK. I have edited the article, in part also to clarify that axioms are sequents rather than just formulae.
Thanks to you two, for improving on the nLab entry!
For bystanders: the edits are at geometic theory in the Idea section.
4: Is the result still true for infinitary disjunctions? (I mean, pulling boxes to the front)
Yes, it is. And it is false for infinitary conjuctions.
In more detail, is valid (assuming for each ), and is not.
In the references for geometric theory I have added the Makkai-Reyes monograph and a pointer to some Lawvere remarks, and taken the ’elephant’ out of the scope of ’textbook’. I have also added ’geometric’ to ’positive’ as name for ’positive formula’ and fixed the formula for torsion groups as pointed out in the above remark #12 where I’ve changed the index to start with n=1 (it would presumably have been possible as well to simply delete the remark, that the formula asserts ’x=0’ as a disjunct).
While I don't object to writing ‘possibly infinitary’ as a clarifying remark where Zhen put it, I do object to the idea that infinitary first-order theories are not really first-order theories. Logic is a very broad topic; finitary logic is a special case. It is an important special case (as can be seen by such results as Lindström's Theorem), but there is far too much assumption in the literature that it is the only case. (I blame Hilbert.)
Actually, if I understand correctly what I've found online about Lindström's Theorem, the issue there is not even whether we are allowing infinitary language but whether we are allowing any variation from untyped first-order classical logic. It is that particular logic that is singled out by this theorem, if I understand it correctly.
Why not create an entry on Lindström’s theorems to which one could link?
In my personal view, such an entry should contain a precise statement of the result, which is technically rather involved and should be done by somebody with some exposure to the state of art in abstract model theory. For instance I don’t have a good intuition how essential all the specific assumptions that enter really are i.e. can you relax these assumptions and still get similar results etc. ? after all, Lindström in 1969 extracted his concept of logical system by generalizing about the then common classical systems. A glimpse over the Väänänen paper suggests that the result transfers.
All in all, I can live with the remarks as they are as side remarks, but wouldn’t like to have an entry containing only a side remark on its subject on my conscience. Though you are probably right that even a rudimentary entry on Lindström could be heplful and would hopefully recruit more easily some expert for further improvements. Anyway I wouldn’t object to some copy and paste on the remarks concerning Lindström in predicate logic.
Funnily, the elephant has a definition of geometric theory in B4.2 that is very much in the spirit of abstract model theory and probably should deserve some mention in the nlab-entry.
Thomas: may I direct you to this? :-)
Seriously, anything you do to get the ball rolling is appreciated. Not being an expert on something shouldn’t stop anyone from contributing in some small way.
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