Converse Barcan Formula
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In quantified
modal logic Modal logic is a kind of logic used to represent statements about Modality (natural language), necessity and possibility. In philosophy and related fields it is used as a tool for understanding concepts such as knowledge, obligation, and causality ...
, the Barcan formula and the converse Barcan formula (more accurately, schemata rather than formulas) (i) syntactically state principles of interchange between quantifiers and modalities; (ii) semantically state a relation between domains of possible worlds. The formulas were introduced as axioms by
Ruth Barcan Marcus Ruth Barcan Marcus (; born Ruth Charlotte Barcan; 2 August 1921 – 19 February 2012) was an American academic philosopher and logician best known for her work in modal and philosophical logic. She developed the first formal systems of quant ...
, in the first extensions of modal propositional logic to include quantification.Journal of Symbolic Logic (1946),11 and (1947), 12 under Ruth C. Barcan Related formulas include the
Buridan formula In quantified modal logic, the Buridan formula and the converse Buridan formula (more accurately, schemata rather than formulas) (i) syntactically state principles of interchange between quantifiers and modalities; (ii) semantically state a relatio ...
.


The Barcan formula

The Barcan formula is: :\forall x \Box Fx \rightarrow \Box \forall x Fx. In English, the schema reads: If every x is necessarily F, then it is necessary that every x is F. It is equivalent to :\Diamond\exists xFx\to\exists x\Diamond Fx. The Barcan formula has generated some controversy because—in terms of
possible world A possible world is a complete and consistent way the world is or could have been. Possible worlds are widely used as a formal device in logic, philosophy, and linguistics in order to provide a semantics for intensional and modal logic. Their met ...
semantics—it implies that all objects which exist in any possible world (accessible to the actual world) exist in the actual world, i.e. that domains cannot grow when one moves to accessible worlds. This thesis is sometimes known as
actualism In analytic philosophy, actualism is the view that everything there ''is'' (i.e., everything that has ''being'', in the broadest sense) is actual. Another phrasing of the thesis is that the domain of unrestricted quantification ranges over all ...
—i.e. that there are no ''merely'' possible individuals. There is some debate as to the informal interpretation of the Barcan formula and its converse. An informal argument against the plausibility of the Barcan formula would be the interpretation of the predicate ''Fx'' as "''x'' is a machine that can tap all the energy locked in the waves of the Atlantic Ocean in a practical and efficient way". In its equivalent form above, the antecedent \Diamond\exists xFx seems plausible since it is at least theoretically possible that such a machine could exist. However, it is not obvious that this implies that there is something that is possibly a machine which could tap the energy of the Atlantic.


Converse Barcan formula

The converse Barcan formula is: :\Box \forall x Fx \rightarrow \forall x \Box Fx. It is equivalent to :\exists x\Diamond Fx\to\Diamond\exists xFx. If a frame is based on a symmetric
accessibility relation An accessibility relation is a relation (math), relation which plays a key role in assigning truth values to sentences in the Kripke semantics, relational semantics for modal logic. In relational semantics, a modal formula's truth value at a '' ...
, then the Barcan formula will be valid in the frame if, and only if, the converse Barcan formula is valid in the frame. It states that domains cannot shrink as one moves to accessible worlds, i.e. that individuals cannot cease to exist. The converse Barcan formula is taken to be more plausible than the Barcan formula.


See also

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Commutative property In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Perhaps most familiar as a p ...


References


External links


''Barcan both ways''
by Melvin Fitting
''Contingent Objects and the Barcan Formula''
by Hayaki Reina {{logic-stub Modal logic