Orders
The signature of orders has no constants or functions, and one binary relation symbols ≤. (It is of course possible to use ≥, < or > instead as the basic relation, with the obvious minor changes to the axioms.) We define x ≥ y, x < y, x > y as abbreviations for y ≤ x, x ≤ y ∧¬y ≤ x, y < x,
Some first-order properties of orders:
- Transitive: ∀x ∀y ∀z x ≤ y∧y ≤ z → x ≤ z
- Reflexive: ∀x x ≤ x
- Antisymmetric: ∀x ∀y x ≤ y ∧ y ≤ x → x = y
- Partial: Transitive∧Reflexive∧Antisymmetric;
- Linear (or total): Partial ∧ ∀x ∀y x≤y ∨ y≤x
- Dense ∀x ∀z x < z → ∃y x < y ∧ y < z ("Between any 2 distinct elements there is another element")
- There is a smallest element: ∃x ∀y x ≤ y
- There is a largest element: ∃x ∀y y ≤ x
- Every element has an immediate successor: ∀x ∃y ∀z x < z ↔ y ≤ z
The theory DLO of dense linear orders without endpoints (i.e. no smallest or largest element) is complete, ω-categorical, but not categorical for any uncountable cardinal. There are 3 other very similar theories: the theory of dense linear orders with a:
- Smallest but no largest element;
- Largest but no smallest element;
- Largest and smallest element.
Being well ordered ("any non-empty subset has a minimal element") is not a first-order property; the usual definition involves quantifying over all subsets.
Read more about this topic: List Of First-order Theories
Famous quotes containing the word orders:
“No man has received from nature the right to give orders to others. Freedom is a gift from heaven, and every individual of the same species has the right to enjoy it as soon as he is in enjoyment of his reason.”
—Denis Diderot (17131784)
“Ive got orders to obey, thank God.”
—Robert Bolt (19241995)
“Your moneys no good here. Orders of the house.”
—Stanley Kubrick (b. 1928)