Ground expression

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In mathematical logic, a ground term of a formal system is a term that does not contain any variables. Similarly, a ground formula is a formula that does not contain any variables. In first-order logic with identity with constant symbols a and b, the sentence Q(a)P(b) is a ground formula. A ground expression is a ground term or ground formula.

Examples

Consider the following expressions in first order logic over a signature containing the constant symbols 0 and 1 for the numbers 0 and 1, respectively, a unary function symbol s for the successor function and a binary function symbol + for addition.

  • s(0),s(s(0)),s(s(s(0))), are ground terms;
  • 0+1,0+1+1, are ground terms;
  • 0+s(0),s(0)+s(0),s(0)+s(s(0))+0 are ground terms;
  • x+s(1) and s(x) are terms, but not ground terms;
  • s(0)=1 and 0+0=0 are ground formulae.

Formal definitions

What follows is a formal definition for first-order languages. Let a first-order language be given, with C the set of constant symbols, F the set of functional operators, and P the set of predicate symbols.

Ground term

A ground term is a term that contains no variables. Ground terms may be defined by logical recursion (formula-recursion):

  1. Elements of C are ground terms;
  2. If fF is an n-ary function symbol and α1,α2,,αn are ground terms, then f(α1,α2,,αn) is a ground term.
  3. Every ground term can be given by a finite application of the above two rules (there are no other ground terms; in particular, predicates cannot be ground terms).

Roughly speaking, the Herbrand universe is the set of all ground terms.

Ground atom

A ground predicate, ground atom or ground literal is an atomic formula all of whose argument terms are ground terms. If pP is an n-ary predicate symbol and α1,α2,,αn are ground terms, then p(α1,α2,,αn) is a ground predicate or ground atom. Roughly speaking, the Herbrand base is the set of all ground atoms,[1] while a Herbrand interpretation assigns a truth value to each ground atom in the base.

Ground formula

A ground formula or ground clause is a formula without variables. Ground formulas may be defined by syntactic recursion as follows:

  1. A ground atom is a ground formula.
  2. If φ and ψ are ground formulas, then ¬φ, φψ, and φψ are ground formulas.

Ground formulas are a particular kind of closed formulas.

See also

References

  1. Alex Sakharov. "Ground Atom". MathWorld. Retrieved October 20, 2022.