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  2. Logic of graphs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logic_of_graphs

    In the monadic second-order logic of graphs, the variables represent objects of up to four types: vertices, edges, sets of vertices, and sets of edges. There are two main variations of monadic second-order graph logic: MSO 1 in which only vertex and vertex set variables are allowed, and MSO 2 in which all four types of variables are allowed ...

  3. Second-order logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-order_logic

    The second-order logic without these restrictions is sometimes called full second-order logic to distinguish it from the monadic version. Monadic second-order logic is particularly used in the context of Courcelle's theorem, an algorithmic meta-theorem in graph theory. The MSO theory of the complete infinite binary tree is decidable.

  4. S2S (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S2S_(mathematics)

    However, with free second order variables, not every S2S formula can be expressed in second order arithmetic through just Π 1 1 transfinite recursion (see reverse mathematics). RCA 0 + (schema) {τ: τ is a true S2S sentence} is equivalent to (schema) {τ: τ is a Π 1 3 sentence provable in Π 1 2 -CA 0 }.

  5. Second-order arithmetic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-order_arithmetic

    The system ACA 0 is a conservative extension of first-order arithmetic (or first-order Peano axioms), defined as the basic axioms, plus the first-order induction axiom scheme (for all formulas φ involving no class variables at all, bound or otherwise), in the language of first-order arithmetic (which does not permit class variables at all).

  6. Monadic second-order logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monadic_second-order_logic

    In mathematical logic, monadic second-order logic (MSO) is the fragment of second-order logic where the second-order quantification is limited to quantification over sets. [1] It is particularly important in the logic of graphs , because of Courcelle's theorem , which provides algorithms for evaluating monadic second-order formulas over graphs ...

  7. Two-variable logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-variable_logic

    The two-variable fragment of first-order logic with no function symbols is known to be decidable even with the addition of counting quantifiers, [4] and thus of uniqueness quantification. This is a more powerful result, as counting quantifiers for high numerical values are not expressible in that logic.

  8. Saddle point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddle_point

    Hyperbolic paraboloid A model of an elliptic hyperboloid of one sheet A monkey saddle. A saddle surface is a smooth surface containing one or more saddle points.. Classical examples of two-dimensional saddle surfaces in the Euclidean space are second order surfaces, the hyperbolic paraboloid = (which is often referred to as "the saddle surface" or "the standard saddle surface") and the ...

  9. Second-order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-order

    Second order approximation, an approximation that includes quadratic terms; Second-order arithmetic, an axiomatization allowing quantification of sets of numbers; Second-order differential equation, a differential equation in which the highest derivative is the second; Second-order logic, an extension of predicate logic