Per Lindström in the context of University of Gothenburg


Per Lindström in the context of University of Gothenburg

⭐ Core Definition: Per Lindström

Per "Pelle" Lindström (9 April 1936 – 21 August 2009, Gothenburg) was a Swedish logician, after whom Lindström's theorem and the Lindström quantifier are named. (He also independently discovered Ehrenfeucht–Fraïssé games.) He was one of the key followers of Lars Svenonius.

Lindström was awarded a PhD from the University of Gothenburg in 1966. His thesis was titled Some Results in the Theory of Models of First Order Languages. A festschrift for Lindström was published in 1986.

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Per Lindström in the context of Quantification (logic)

In logic, a quantifier is an operator that specifies how many individuals in the domain of discourse satisfy an open formula. For instance, the universal quantifier in the first-order formula expresses that everything in the domain satisfies the property denoted by . On the other hand, the existential quantifier in the formula expresses that there exists something in the domain which satisfies that property. A formula where a quantifier takes widest scope is called a quantified formula. A quantified formula must contain a bound variable and a subformula specifying a property of the referent of that variable.

The most commonly used quantifiers are and . These quantifiers are standardly defined as duals; in classical logic: each can be defined in terms of the other using negation. They can also be used to define more complex quantifiers, as in the formula which expresses that nothing has the property . Other quantifiers are only definable within second-order logic or higher-order logics. Quantifiers have been generalized beginning with the work of Andrzej Mostowski and Per Lindström.

View the full Wikipedia page for Quantification (logic)
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