Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T00:30:14.581Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

MONADIC INTUITIONISTIC AND MODAL LOGICS ADMITTING PROVABILITY INTERPRETATIONS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2021

GURAM BEZHANISHVILI
Affiliation:
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY LAS CRUCES, NM 88003, USA E-mail: [email protected]
KRISTINA BRANTLEY*
Affiliation:
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY LAS CRUCES, NM 88003, USA E-mail: [email protected]
JULIA ILIN
Affiliation:
INSTITUTE OF LOGIC, LANGUAGE AND COMPUTATION UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM P.O.BOX 94242, 1090 GE AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The Gödel translation provides an embedding of the intuitionistic logic $\mathsf {IPC}$ into the modal logic $\mathsf {Grz}$ , which then embeds into the modal logic $\mathsf {GL}$ via the splitting translation. Combined with Solovay’s theorem that $\mathsf {GL}$ is the modal logic of the provability predicate of Peano Arithmetic $\mathsf {PA}$ , both $\mathsf {IPC}$ and $\mathsf {Grz}$ admit provability interpretations. When attempting to ‘lift’ these results to the monadic extensions $\mathsf {MIPC}$ , $\mathsf {MGrz}$ , and $\mathsf {MGL}$ of these logics, the same techniques no longer work. Following a conjecture made by Esakia, we add an appropriate version of Casari’s formula to these monadic extensions (denoted by a ‘+’), obtaining that the Gödel translation embeds $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ into $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ and the splitting translation embeds $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ . As proven by Japaridze, Solovay’s result extends to the monadic system $\mathsf {MGL}$ , which leads us to a provability interpretation of both $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ .

Type
Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Association for Symbolic Logic

1 Introduction

1.1 Propositional case

The intuitionistic point of view identifies truth with provability. This has resulted in the well-known Brouwer–Heyting–Kolmogorov interpretation (BHK-interpretation for short), which is considered as the intended, albeit informal interpretation of intuitionistic logic (see, e.g., [Reference Artemov and Beklemishev2] and the references therein). Gödel [Reference Gödel and Feferman27] took the first step in making this interpretation more formal by introducing a modal calculus of classical provability and translating the intuitionistic propositional calculus $\mathsf {IPC}$ into it. Gödel’s modal calculus turned out to be equivalent to Lewis’ well-known modal logic $\mathsf {S4}$ , and the translation became known as the Gödel translation. We recall that it is defined as follows:

  • $p^t=\square p$ for a propositional letter p;

  • $(\varphi \vee \psi )^t = \varphi ^t\vee \psi ^t$ ;

  • $(\varphi \wedge \psi )^t = \varphi ^t\wedge \psi ^t$ ;

  • $(\varphi \rightarrow \psi )^t = \square (\varphi ^t\to \psi ^t)$ ;

  • $(\neg \varphi )^t = \square (\neg \varphi ^t)$ .

McKinsey and Tarski [Reference McKinsey and Tarski33] proved that this translation is full and faithful; that is,

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{IPC}\vdash\varphi\text{ iff } \mathsf{S4}\vdash \varphi^t. \end{align*} $$

There are many other normal extensions of $\mathsf {S4}$ , called modal companions of $\mathsf {IPC}$ , in which $\mathsf {IPC}$ is embedded fully and faithfully. Esakia [Reference Esakia14] showed that the largest such companion is Grzegorczyk’s logic $\mathsf {Grz}$ , which is the normal extension of $\mathsf {S4}$ with the Grzegorczyk axiom

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{grz}=:\square(\square(p\rightarrow\square p)\rightarrow p)\rightarrow p. \end{align*} $$

Thus, we have

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{IPC}\vdash\varphi\text{ iff } \mathsf{Grz}\vdash \varphi^t. \end{align*} $$

Goldblatt [Reference Goldblatt28], Boolos [Reference Boolos7], and Kuznetsov and Muravitsky [Reference Kuznetsov and Muravitsky32] showed that the splitting translation embeds $\mathsf {Grz}$ into the Gödel–Löb logic $\mathsf {GL}$ which is the normal extension of the least normal modal logic $\mathsf {K}$ with the axiom

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{gl}:=\square(\square p\to p)\to\square p. \end{align*} $$

We recall that the splitting translation is defined by “splitting boxes” in formulas (see, e.g., [Reference Boolos8, p. 8]); that is, for a modal formula $\varphi $ , let $\square ^{+}\varphi $ be the abbreviation of the formula $\varphi \wedge \square \varphi $ . Then the splitting translation is defined by letting $\varphi ^s$ be the result of replacing all occurrences of $\square $ in $\varphi $ by $\square ^{+}$ . We then have

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{Grz}\vdash\varphi \mbox{ iff } \mathsf{GL}\vdash\varphi^s. \end{align*} $$

Combining these results yields

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{IPC}\vdash\varphi \mbox{ iff } \mathsf{Grz}\vdash\varphi^t \mbox{ iff } \mathsf{GL}\vdash(\varphi^t)^s. \end{align*} $$

Finally, by Solovay’s theorem [Reference Solovay40], $\mathsf {GL}$ can be thought of as the modal logic of the provability predicate of Peano Arithmetic $\mathsf {PA}$ . Thus, both $\mathsf {IPC}$ and $\mathsf {Grz}$ admit provability interpretations. That $\mathsf {IPC}$ admits such an interpretation is especially important in relation to the BHK-interpretation.

1.2 Predicate case

The Gödel translation extends to the predicate case by setting

  • $(\forall x\varphi )^t = \square \forall x (\varphi ^t),$

  • $(\exists x\varphi )^t = \exists x(\varphi ^t)$ .

Let $\mathsf {IQC}$ be the intuitionistic predicate calculus and let $\mathsf {QS4}$ be the predicate $\mathsf {S4}$ (the definitions of predicate intuitionistic and modal logics can, for example, be found in [Reference Gabbay, Shehtman and Skvortsov26]). Then

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{IQC}\vdash\varphi\text{ iff } \mathsf{QS4}\vdash \varphi^t, \end{align*} $$

so the extension of the Gödel translation to the predicate case remains full and faithful (see, e.g., [Reference Rasiowa and Sikorski39]). Let $\mathsf {QGrz}$ be the predicate $\mathsf {Grz}$ and let $\mathsf {QGL}$ be the predicate $\mathsf {GL}$ . In [Reference Gabbay, Shehtman and Skvortsov26, p. 157] it is attributed to Pankratyev that the Gödel translation of $\mathsf {IQC}$ into $\mathsf {QGrz}$ remains full and faithful. However, these are the only positive results in the predicate case since Montagna [Reference Montagna34] showed that Solovay’s theorem no longer holds for $\mathsf {QGL}$ . Moreover, the splitting translation does not embed $\mathsf {QGrz}$ fully and faithfully into $\mathsf {QGL}$ (see below).

1.3 Monadic case

In view of the above, Esakia [Reference Esakia17] suggested to study these translations for the monadic (one-variable) fragments of $\mathsf {IQC}$ , $\mathsf {QGrz}$ , and $\mathsf {QGL}$ . The monadic fragment of $\mathsf {IQC}$ was introduced by Prior [Reference Prior38] under the name of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ . The monadic fragment of $\mathsf {QS4}$ was studied by Fischer-Servi [Reference Fischer-Servi22], and the monadic fragments of $\mathsf {QGrz}$ and $\mathsf {QGL}$ by Esakia [Reference Esakia17]. We denote these fragments by $\mathsf {MS4}$ , $\mathsf {MGrz}$ , and $\mathsf {MGL}$ , respectively.

Fischer-Servi [Reference Fischer-Servi22] proved that the Gödel translation embeds $\mathsf {MIPC}$ into $\mathsf {MS4}$ fully and faithfully. As we will see, the Gödel translation also embeds $\mathsf {MIPC}$ fully and faithfully into $\mathsf {MGrz}$ . Japaridze [Reference Japaridze30, Reference Japaridze31] proved that Solovay’s result extends to $\mathsf {MGL}$ . Therefore, to complete the picture, it would be sufficient to show that the splitting translation embeds $\mathsf {MGrz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ fully and faithfully. However, as was observed by Esakia, this is no longer true. To see this, we recall Casari’s predicate formula

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{Cas: }\quad\forall x((P(x)\rightarrow\forall y P(y))\rightarrow\forall y P(y))\rightarrow\forall x P(x). \end{align*} $$

Let $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ be the predicate logic obtained from $\mathsf {IQC}$ by postulating Casari’s formula as a new axiom. It was pointed out by Esakia [Reference Esakia18] (see also [Reference Esakia19, Section 7]) that $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ is equivalent to the predicate logic obtained from $\mathsf {IQC}$ by postulating the following modified version of universal generalization:

(+) $$ \begin{align} \frac{(P(a)\to\forall x P(x))\to P(a)}{\forall x P(x)}. \end{align} $$

Among other things, Esakia observed that $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ is a conservative extension of $\mathsf {IPC}$ and that Kuroda’s formula $\forall x\neg \neg P(x)\to \neg \neg \forall x P(x)$ is provable in $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ . In this regard it is worthwhile to point out that Heyting considered it “one of the most striking features of intuitionistic logic” that Kuroda’s formula is not derivable in $\mathsf {IQC}$ ; see, e.g., [Reference Esakia18, p. 27].

We consider the monadic version of Casari’s formula

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{MCas: }\quad\forall\left(\left(p\rightarrow\forall p\right)\rightarrow\forall p\right)\rightarrow \forall p. \end{align*} $$

Using the same notation for the Gödel and splitting translations in the monadic setting, we have that $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash ((\mathsf {MCas})^t)^s$ but $\mathsf {MGrz}\not \vdash (\mathsf {MCas})^t$ (see Theorems 3.9 and 3.10). This yields that $\mathsf {MGrz}$ does not embed into $\mathsf {MGL}$ faithfully.

Let

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M^{+}IPC}=\mathsf{MIPC}+\mathsf{MCas} \end{align*} $$

be the extension of $\mathsf {{MIPC}}$ by $\mathsf {MCas}$ , and let

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M^{+}Grz}=\mathsf{MGrz}+(\mathsf{MCas})^t \end{align*} $$

be the extension of $\mathsf {MGrz}$ by $(\mathsf {MCas})^t$ . Esakia claimed that the translations

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{IPC}\rightarrow\mathsf{Grz}\rightarrow\mathsf{GL} \end{align*} $$

are lifted to

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M^{+}IPC}\rightarrow\mathsf{M^{+}Grz}\rightarrow\mathsf{MGL}. \end{align*} $$

Verifying this claim will be our main goal, which together with Japaridze’s result [Reference Japaridze30, Reference Japaridze31] on arithmetical completeness of $\mathsf {MGL}$ yields the desired provability interpretations of $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ . As we point out in Remark 5.19, $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ axiomatizes the monadic fragment of $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ . Thus, it is the monadic fragment of the amended intuitionistic calculus $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ , and not of $\mathsf {IQC}$ , that admits a provability interpretation. It would be of interest to investigate philosophical consequences of this result in connection with the BHK-interpretation.

1.4 Main contribution and organization

Our main result is the following theorem.

Theorem. $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}\vdash \varphi $ iff $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\vdash \varphi ^t$ iff $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash (\varphi ^t)^s.$

We will prove the theorem semantically. The most challenging part of our argument is in establishing the finite model property for $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ (see Sections 5 and 6). That $\mathsf {{MGL}}$ also has the finite model property was proven by Japaridze [Reference Japaridze30]. In fact, our technique of proving the finite model property for $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ can be adapted to provide an alternative proof of Japaridze’s result for $\mathsf {{MGL}}$ (see [Reference Brantley9]). Once the finite model property of these logics is established, the standard argument yields our main result (see the proof of Theorem 4.12 for details).

The paper is organized as follows. Section 2 provides a brief overview of monadic logics and their corresponding algebraic and relational semantics. Section 3 discusses the Gödel and splitting translations in the monadic setting. In Section 4 we investigate how the addition of the adapted variations of Casari’s formula affect the semantics. Finally, in Sections 5 and 6 we establish the finite model property for $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ , respectively, using a modified selective filtration, which allows us to conclude the main result stated above.

We use the following as our standard references: [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12] for intuitionistic and modal propositional logics, [Reference Gabbay, Shehtman and Skvortsov26] for intuitionistic and modal predicate logics, and [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25] for intuitionistic modal logics and classical bi-modal systems.

2 Monadic logics

In this section we recall the notion of monadic intuitionistic and modal logics and discuss their algebraic and frame-based semantics.

2.1 Monadic intuitionistic logic

The monadic intuitionistic propositional calculus $\mathsf {MIPC}$ was defined by Prior [Reference Prior38] and it was shown by Bull [Reference Bull11] that $\mathsf {MIPC}$ axiomatizes the monadic fragment of the predicate intuitionistic logic. To define $\mathsf {MIPC}$ , let $\mathcal L$ be the language of propositional intuitionistic logic, and let $\mathcal {L}_{\forall \exists }$ be the enrichment of $\mathcal {L}$ with the quantifier modalities $\forall $ and $\exists $ .Footnote 1

Definition 2.1. $\mathsf {MIPC}$ is the smallest set of $\mathcal {L}_{\forall \exists }$ -formulas containing

  • all axioms of $\mathsf {IPC}$ ,

  • the $\mathsf {S4}$ -axioms for $\forall $ ,Footnote 2

  • the $\mathsf {S5}$ -axioms for $\exists $ ,Footnote 3

  • the connecting axioms $\exists p\to \forall \exists p$ and $\exists \forall p\to \forall p$ ,

and closed under the inference rules of substitution, modus ponens, and $\forall $ -necessitation $\frac {\varphi }{\forall \varphi }$ .

Remark 2.2. The non-symmetric feature of intuitionistic quantifiers is captured in the fact that while $\exists $ is an $\sf S5$ -modality, $\forall $ is merely an $\mathsf {S4}$ -modality, and the $\forall $ -counterpart $\forall (\forall p\vee q)\leftrightarrow (\forall p\vee \forall q)$ of $\exists (\exists p\wedge q)\leftrightarrow (\exists p\wedge \exists q)$ is not provable in $\mathsf {MIPC}$ .

Algebraic semantics for $\mathsf {MIPC}$ is given by monadic Heyting algebras [Reference Bezhanishvili3, Reference Monteiro and Varsavsky35].

Definition 2.3. A monadic Heyting algebra is a triple $(H,\forall ,\exists )$ where

  • H is a Heyting algebra,

  • $\forall :H\to H$ is an $\mathsf {S4}$ -operator,Footnote 4

  • $\exists :H\to H$ is an $\mathsf {S5}$ -operator,Footnote 5

  • $\exists a\le \forall \exists a$ and $\exists \forall a\le \forall a$ .

Remark 2.4. This in particular implies that the fixpoints of $\forall $ and $\exists $ are equal and form a Heyting subalgebra of H. In fact, every monadic Heyting algebra can be represented as a pair $(H,H_0)$ where $H_0$ is a Heyting subalgebra of H and the inclusion has both the right ( $\forall $ ) and left $(\exists )$ adjoint.

As usual, propositional letters of $\mathcal {L}_{\forall \exists }$ are evaluated as elements of H, the connectives as the corresponding operations of H, and the quantifier modalities as the corresponding modal operators of H. The standard Lindenbaum–Tarski construction then yields:

Theorem 2.5. $\mathsf {MIPC}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {H}\vDash \varphi $ for each monadic Heyting algebra $\mathfrak {H}$ .

Kripke semantics for $\mathsf {MIPC}$ is an extension of Kripke semantics for $\mathsf {IPC}$ , and was developed in [Reference Esakia17, Reference Fischer-Servi24, Reference Ono36].

Definition 2.6. An $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame is a triple $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ where $(W,R)$ is an $\mathsf {IPC}$ -frameFootnote 6 and E is an equivalence relation on W satisfying

$$ \begin{align*} (R\circ E)(x)\subseteq (E\circ R)(x) \mbox{ for all } x\in W;\end{align*} $$

that is, if $xEy$ and $yRz$ , then there is $w\in W$ such that $xRw$ and $wEz$ :

We refer to this condition as commutativity. We will sometimes refer to R as a ‘vertical relation’, and to E as a ‘horizontal relation’, as depicted in the diagram above.

Valuations on $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames are defined as for $\mathsf {IPC}$ -frames; that is, a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F=(W,R,E)$ is an assignment of R-upsets of $\mathfrak F$ to propositional letters.Footnote 7 As usual, the truth relation in $\mathfrak F$ is defined by induction. The clauses for the connectives $\wedge ,\vee ,\to ,\neg $ are the same as for $\mathsf {IPC}$ -frames:

$$\begin{align*}\begin{array}{lcl} w\vDash_\nu p \quad &\text{iff} & \quad w\in\nu(p); \\ w\vDash_\nu\varphi\wedge\psi \quad &\text{iff}& \quad w\vDash_\nu\varphi \text{ and } w\vDash_\nu\psi;\\ w\vDash_\nu\varphi\vee\psi \quad &\text{iff}& \quad w\vDash_\nu\varphi \text{ or } w\vDash_\nu\psi;\\ w\vDash_\nu\varphi\to\psi \quad &\text{iff}& \quad (\text{for all } v)(wRv \text{ and } v\vDash_\nu\varphi \text{ imply } v\vDash_\nu\psi);\\ w\vDash_\nu\neg\varphi\quad &\text{iff} & \quad (\text{for all } v)(wRv \text{ implies } v\not\vDash_\nu\varphi).\\ \end{array} \end{align*}$$

To extend this to the truth relation for quantifier modalities, we first define a new relation Q on W as the composition $E\circ R$ ; that is, $xQy$ iff there is $z\in W$ such that $xRz$ and $zEy$ :

Then Q is a quasi-order (reflexive and transitive) and $\forall ,\exists $ are interpreted in $\mathfrak F$ as follows:

$$\begin{align*}\begin{array}{lcl} w\vDash_\nu\forall\varphi\quad&\text{iff}&\quad (\text{for all } v)(wQv \text{ implies } v\vDash_\nu\varphi);\\ w\vDash_\nu\exists\varphi\quad&\text{iff}&\quad(\text{there exists } v)(wEv\text{ and } v\vDash_\nu\varphi). \end{array} \end{align*}$$

Sometimes we also write $(\mathfrak F, w) \vDash _\nu \varphi $ to emphasize the underlying frame $\mathfrak F$ or simply $w \vDash \varphi $ in case $\mathfrak F$ and $\nu $ are clear from the context.

There is a close connection between algebraic and relational semantics for $\mathsf {MIPC}$ . To see this, let $\mathfrak F=(W,R,E)$ be an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame. For $x\in W$ , let

$$ \begin{align*} Q(x)=\{y\in W\mid xQy\} \mbox{ and } E(x)=\{y\in W\mid xEy\}. \end{align*} $$

Set $\mathfrak F^+=(\mathsf {Up}(\mathfrak F),\forall ,\exists )$ where $\mathsf {Up}(\mathfrak F)$ is the Heyting algebra of R-upsets of $\mathfrak F$ , and for $U\in \mathsf {Up}(\mathfrak F)$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \forall U=\{x\in W\mid Q(x)\subseteq U\} \mbox{ and } \exists U=\{x\in W\mid E(x)\cap U\ne\varnothing\}. \end{align*} $$

Then $\mathfrak F^+$ is a monadic Heyting algebra, and every monadic Heyting algebra is represented as a subalgebra of such. To see this, for a monadic Heyting algebra $\mathfrak H=(H,\forall ,\exists )$ , let W be the set of prime filters of H, let R be the inclusion, and let E be defined by $\eta E \zeta $ iff $\eta \cap H_0=\zeta \cap H_0$ , where we recall that $H_0$ is the fixpoint subalgebra of H (see Remark 2.4). Then $\mathfrak H_+ := (W,R,E)$ is an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame (where $\eta Q\zeta $ iff $\eta \cap H_0\subseteq \zeta \cap H_0$ ) and there is an embedding $e:\mathfrak H\to \mathfrak (\mathfrak H_+)^+$ given by

$$ \begin{align*} e(a)=\{\eta\in\mathfrak H_+\mid a\in\eta\}. \end{align*} $$

In general, the embedding e is not onto, so to recognize the e-image of H in the Heyting algebra of upsets, we introduce the concept of a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame. One way to do this is to introduce topology on an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame.

We recall that a topological space is a Stone space if it is compact Hausdorff and zero-dimensional.Footnote 8 A relation R on a Stone space W is continuous if (i) $R(x)$ is closed for each $x\in W$ and (ii) U clopen implies $R^{-1}(U)$ is clopen, where

$$ \begin{align*} R^{-1}(U)=\{x\in W\mid xRu \mbox{ for some } u\in U\}. \end{align*} $$

Definition 2.7. An $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ is a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame if

  • W is a Stone space,

  • R and Q are continuous relations,

  • if A is a clopen R-upset, then $E(A)$ is a clopen R-upset.

Remark 2.8. This does not imply that A clopen implies $E(A)$ is clopen; see [Reference Bezhanishvili4, p. 32]. However, we do have that A closed implies $E(A)$ is closed; see [Reference Bezhanishvili4, Lemma 7].

As follows from Esakia’s representation of Heyting algebras [Reference Esakia13], for a Heyting algebra H, there is a Stone topology on the set W of prime filters of H generated by the basis

$$ \begin{align*} \{e(a)\setminus e(b)\mid a,b\in H\}, \end{align*} $$

the inclusion relation R on W is continuous, and e is a Heyting isomorphism from H onto the Heyting algebra of clopen R-upsets of W.

By [Reference Bezhanishvili4, Theorem 13], if $\mathfrak H=(H,\forall ,\exists )$ is a monadic Heyting algebra, then $(W,R,E)$ is a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame, which we denote by $\mathfrak H_*$ , and e is an isomorphism from $\mathfrak H$ onto the monadic Heyting algebra $(\mathfrak H_*)^*$ of clopen R-upsets of $\mathfrak H_*$ . Thus, every monadic Heyting algebra can be thought of as the algebra of clopen R-upsets of some descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame. This representation together with Theorem 2.5 yields:

Theorem 2.9. $\mathsf {MIPC}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

If the descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame is finite, then the topology is discrete, and hence finite descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames are simply finite $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames. It is well known that $\mathsf {MIPC}$ has the finite model property (FMP):

Theorem 2.10. $\mathsf {MIPC}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each finite $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

This was first proved by Bull [Reference Bull10] using algebraic semantics. Bull’s proof contained a gap, which was later filled by Fischer-Servi [Reference Fischer-Servi23] and Ono [Reference Ono36] independently of each other. For a more frame-theoretic proof, using the technique of selective filtration, see [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 10.3].

We finish Section 2.1 by recalling an important property of descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames, which will be useful later on.

Definition 2.11. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame and let $A\subseteq W$ .

  1. 1. We say $x\in A$ is R-maximal in A if $xRy$ and $y\in A$ imply $x=y$ .

  2. 2. The R-maximum of A is the set of all R-maximal points of A, i.e.,

    $$ \begin{align*}\max A=\{x\in A \mid xRy\text{ and } y\in A \mbox{ imply } x=y\}.\end{align*} $$

The next lemma states that every point in the E-saturation of clopen A sees a point that is maximal in the E-saturation of A. The proof follows from the result of Fine [Reference Fine21] and Esakia [Reference Esakia16, Reference Esakia20] that can be phrased as follows: If A is a closed subset of a descriptive $\mathsf {IPC}$ -frame, then for each $x\in A$ there is $y\in \max A$ such that $xRy$ . Since A clopen implies that $E(A)$ is closed (see Remark 2.8), the proof is a consequence of the Fine-Esakia lemma.

Lemma 2.12. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame. For each clopen A and $x\in E(A)$ , there is $y\in \max E(A)$ such that $xRy$ .

2.2 Monadic modal logics

Let $\mathcal {ML}$ be the basic propositional modal language (with one modality $\Box $ ). As usual, the least normal modal logic will be denoted by $\mathsf {K}$ , and normal modal logics are normal extensions of $\mathsf {K}$ .

Let $\mathcal {ML_{\forall }}$ be the bimodal language which enriches $\mathcal {ML}$ with the modality $\forall $ . We use the abbreviation $\exists \varphi $ for $\neg \forall \neg \varphi $ .

Definition 2.13.

  1. 1. The monadic $\mathsf {K}$ is the least set of $\mathcal {ML_{\forall }}$ -formulas containing

    • the $\mathsf {K}$ -axiom for $\Box $ ,Footnote 9

    • the $\mathsf {S5}$ -axioms for $\forall $ ,Footnote 10

    • the bridge axiom $\square \forall p\to \forall \square p$ ,

    and closed under $\forall $ -necessitation $\frac {\varphi }{\forall \varphi }$ as well as under the usual rules of substitution, modus ponens, and $\square $ -necessitation. We denote the monadic $\mathsf {K}$ by $\mathsf {MK}$ .

  2. 2. A normal extension of $\mathsf {MK}$ is an extension of $\mathsf {MK}$ which is closed under the above rules of inference. We call normal extensions of $\mathsf {MK}$ normal monadic modal logics or simply mm-logics.

  3. 3. Let $\mathsf {L}$ be a normal modal logic (in $\mathcal {ML}$ ). The least monadic extension $\mathsf {ML}$ of $\mathsf {L}$ is the smallest mm-logic containing $\mathsf {MK}\cup \mathsf {L}$ .

Remark 2.14.

  1. 1. Monadic modal logics are bimodal logics in the language with two modalities $\square ,\forall $ , where $\forall $ is an $\mathsf {S5}$ -modality. They correspond to expanding relativized products discussed in [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 9].

  2. 2. The formula $\forall \square p\to \square \forall p$ , which is the converse of the bridge axiom, and is the monadic version of Barcan’s formula, is not provable in $\mathsf {MK}$ .

Algebraic semantics for monadic modal logics is given by monadic modal algebras.

Definition 2.15. A monadic modal algebra or simply an mm-algebra is a triple $(B,\square ,\forall )$ where

  • $(B,\square )$ is a modal algebra,Footnote 11

  • $(B,\forall )$ is an $\mathsf {S5}$ -algebra,Footnote 12

  • $\square \forall a\le \forall \square a$ .

Remark 2.16. As with monadic Heyting algebras, the $\forall $ -fixpoints of an mm-algebra $(B,\square ,\forall )$ form a subalgebra of the modal algebra $(B,\square )$ , and each mm-algebra is represented as a pair $(B,B_0)$ of modal algebras such that the embedding of $B_0$ into B has a right adjoint ( $\forall $ ).

Kripke semantics for mm-logics is given by the augmented Kripke frames of Esakia [Reference Esakia17].

Definition 2.17. An augmented Kripke frame is a triple $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ where $(W,R)$ is a Kripke frameFootnote 13 and E is an equivalence relation on W satisfying commutativity, i.e., $(R\circ E)(x)\subseteq (E\circ R)(x)$ for all $x\in W$ ; that is, if $xEy$ and $yRz$ , then there is $w\in W$ such that $xRw$ and $wEz$ :

As with $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames, we may refer to R as a ‘vertical relation’, and to E as a ‘horizontal relation’, as depicted in the diagram above.

Valuations on augmented Kripke frames are defined analogously to Kripke frames; that is, a valuation $\nu $ on an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ assigns subsets of W to propositional letters. The truth relation clauses for the connectives $\vee , \neg $ , the modality $ \Box $ , and its dual $\Diamond $ are defined as for Kripke frames:

$$ \begin{align*} &x \vDash_{\nu} p \quad &\text{ iff }&\quad x\in\nu(p); \\ &x \vDash_{\nu}\psi\vee\chi \quad &\text{ iff } & \quad x \vDash_{\nu}\psi\text{ or } x \vDash_{\nu}\chi; \\ &x \vDash_{\nu}\neg\psi \quad& \text{ iff } & \quad x \not\vDash_{\nu}\psi; \\ & x \vDash_{\nu}\square\psi \quad & \text{ iff }&\quad (\text{for all } y\in W) (xRy\Rightarrow y\vDash_{\nu}\psi); \\ &x \vDash_{\nu}\lozenge\psi \quad & \text{ iff }&\quad (\text{there exists } y\in W )(xRy\text{ and } y \vDash_{\nu}\psi).\\ &&&\hspace{-100pt}\text{The modality }\forall \text{ and its dual }\exists\text{ are interpreted via the relation }E\text{ as follows:}\\ & x\vDash_{\nu}\forall\varphi\quad &\text{iff} &\quad (\text{for all } y\in W)(xEy\Rightarrow y\vDash_{\nu}\varphi);\\ & x\vDash_{\nu}\exists\varphi\quad & \text{iff} &\quad(\text{there exists } y\in W)(xEy\text{ and }y\vDash_{\nu}\varphi). \end{align*} $$

We also use the notation $(\mathfrak F, w) \vDash _\nu \varphi $ or $w \vDash \varphi $ .

As in the case of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ , there is a close connection between algebraic and relational semantics for mm-logics. For an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak F=(W,R,E)$ , set $\mathfrak F^+=(\wp (\mathfrak F),\square ,\forall )$ where $\wp (\mathfrak F)$ is the powerset of $\mathfrak F$ , and for $U\in \mathsf {Up}(\mathfrak F)$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \square U=\{x\in W\mid R(x)\subseteq U\} \mbox{ and } \forall U=\{x\in W\mid E(x)\subseteq U\}. \end{align*} $$

Then $\mathfrak F^+$ is an mm-algebra, and every mm-algebra is represented as a subalgebra of such. To see this, for an mm-algebra $\mathfrak B=(B,\square ,\forall )$ , let W be the set of ultrafilters of B, and let R and E be defined by

$$ \begin{align*} \eta R \zeta \mbox{ iff }\square a\in\eta \mbox{ implies } a\in\zeta, \mbox{ and } \eta E \zeta \mbox{ iff } \eta\cap B_0=\zeta\cap B_0. \end{align*} $$

Then $\mathfrak B_+=(W,R,E)$ is an augmented Kripke frame and there is an embedding $e:\mathfrak B\to \mathfrak (\mathfrak B_+)^+$ given by

$$ \begin{align*} e(a)=\{\eta\in\mathfrak B_+\mid a\in\eta\}. \end{align*} $$

In general, the embedding e is not onto, so to recognize the e-image of $\mathfrak B$ in the powerset, we introduce the concept of a descriptive augmented Kripke frame. As in the case of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ , we do this by introducing topology on augmented Kripke frames.

Definition 2.18. An augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ is a descriptive augmented Kripke frame if W is a Stone space and R and E are continuous relations.

As follows from the representation of modal algebras, for a modal algebra B, there is a Stone topology on the set W of ultrafilters of B generated by the basis $\{e(a)\mid a\in B\}$ , the relation R on W is continuous, and e is a modal isomorphism from B onto the modal algebra of clopen subsets of W.

If $\mathfrak B=(B,\square ,\forall )$ is an mm-algebra, then $(W,R,E)$ is a descriptive augmented Kripke frame, which we denote by $\mathfrak B_*$ , and e is an isomorphism from $\mathfrak B$ onto the mm-algebra $(\mathfrak B_*)^*$ of clopen subsets of $\mathfrak B_*$ . Thus, every mm-algebra can be thought of as the algebra of clopen subsets of some descriptive augmented Kripke frame.

2.3 $\mathsf {MS4}$ , $\mathsf {MGrz}$ , and $\mathsf {MGL}$

We next focus on the least monadic extension $\mathsf {MS4}$ of the modal logic $\mathsf {S4}$ .

Definition 2.19.

  1. 1. The monadic $\mathsf {S4}$ is the least monadic extension $\mathsf {MS4}$ of the modal logic $\mathsf {S4}$ .

  2. 2. An $\mathsf {MS4}$ -algebra is an mm-algebra $(B,\square ,\forall )$ such that $(B,\square )$ is an $\mathsf {S4}$ -algebra.

  3. 3. An $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame is an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ such that $(W,R)$ is an $\mathsf {S4}$ -frame.

  4. 4. A descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame is a descriptive augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ such that $(W,R,E)$ is an $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame.

As in the case of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ , we have the following standard completeness results:

Theorem 2.20.

  1. 1. $\mathsf {MS4}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {B}\vDash \varphi $ for each $\mathsf {MS4}$ -algebra $\mathfrak {B}$ .

  2. 2. $\mathsf {MS4}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

We also have that $\mathsf {MS4}$ has the finite model property (see [Reference Bezhanishvili and Carai6] and the references therein).

Theorem 2.21. $\mathsf {MS4}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each finite $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame and $A \subseteq W$ . The R-maximal points of A and the R-maximum of A are defined as in Definition 2.11. In the context of $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frames, we also need the notion of quasi-R-maximal points.

Definition 2.22. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame and $A \subseteq W$ .

  1. 1. We say $x\in A$ is quasi-R-maximal in A if $xRy$ and $y\in A$ imply $yRx$ .

  2. 2. The quasi-R-maximum of A is the set of all quasi- $R$ -maximal points of A, i.e.,

    $$ \begin{align*}\text{q}\hspace{-.25em}\max A=\{x\in A \mid xRy\text{ and }y\in A \text{ imply } yRx\}.\end{align*} $$

Note that $\max A\subseteq \text {q}\hspace {-.25em}\max A$ as R is reflexive, but not conversely. The following lemma is a consequence of the Fine-Esakia lemma [Reference Esakia16, Reference Esakia20, Reference Fine21] for descriptive $\mathsf {S4}$ -frames.

Lemma 2.23. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame. For each closed $A \subseteq W$ we have $A\subseteq R^{-1}\mathrm{q}\kern-2pt\max A$ .

Definition 2.24.

  1. 1. The monadic $\mathsf {Grz}$ is the least monadic extension $\mathsf {MGrz}$ of Grzegorczyk’s logic $\mathsf {Grz}$ .

  2. 2. An $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -algebra is an mm-algebra $(B,\square ,\forall )$ such that $(B,\square )$ is a $\mathsf {Grz}$ -algebra.

  3. 3. An $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame is an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ such that $(W,R)$ is a $\mathsf {Grz}$ -frame.

  4. 4. A descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame is a descriptive $\mathsf {S4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ validating Grzegorczyk’s axiom $\mathsf {grz}$ .

Again, we have the following standard completeness results:

Theorem 2.25.

  1. 1. $\mathsf {MGrz}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {B}\vDash \varphi $ for each $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -algebra $\mathfrak {B}$ .

  2. 2. $\mathsf {MGrz}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

It is well known that an $\mathsf {S4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R)$ is a $\mathsf {Grz}$ -frame iff R is a Noetherian partial order; that is, a partial order with no infinite ascending chains (of distinct points). Thus, if $\mathfrak {F}$ is finite, then $\mathfrak {F}$ is a $\mathsf {Grz}$ -frame iff R is a partial order.

It is a result of Esakia that a descriptive $\mathsf {S4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R)$ is a descriptive $\mathsf {Grz}$ -frame iff for each clopen $A \subseteq W$ the R-maximal and quasi-R-maximal points of A coincide. These results clearly hold for $\mathsf {MGrz}$ as well.

Lemma 2.26. [Reference Esakia15]

  1. 1. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame. Then $\mathfrak {F}\vDash \mathsf {grz}$ iff for each clopen A we have $\mathrm{q}\hspace {-.25em}\max A=\max A$ .

  2. 2. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame. For each clopen A we have $A\subseteq R^{-1}\max A$ .

Definition 2.27.

  1. 1. The monadic $\mathsf {GL}$ is the least monadic extension $\mathsf {MGL}$ of the Gödel–Löb logic $\mathsf {GL}$ .

  2. 2. An $\mathsf {MGL}$ -algebra is an mm-algebra $(B,\square ,\forall )$ such that $(B,\square )$ is a $\mathsf {GL}$ -algebra.

  3. 3. An $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame is an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ such that $(W,R)$ is a $\mathsf {GL}$ -frame.

  4. 4. A descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame is a descriptive augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ validating $\mathsf {gl}$ .

As before, we have the following standard completeness results:

Theorem 2.28.

  1. 1. $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {B}\vDash \varphi $ for each $\mathsf {MGL}$ -algebra $\mathfrak {B}$ .

  2. 2. $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for each descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ .

It is well known that a Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R)$ is a $\mathsf {GL}$ -frame iff R is transitive and dually well founded (no infinite ascending chains). Call R a strict partial order if R is irreflexive and transitive. If W is finite, then $\mathfrak {F}$ is a $\mathsf {GL}$ -frame iff R is a strict partial order.

A characterization of descriptive $\mathsf {GL}$ -frames was originally established by Esakia and given in [Reference Abashidze1]. It generalizes directly to descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frames. For a transitive frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R)$ and $A\subseteq W$ , define the irreflexive maximum of A by

$$ \begin{align*} \qquad\mu(A)=\{x\in A \mid R(x)\cap A=\varnothing\}. \end{align*} $$

Lemma 2.29. [Reference Abashidze1]

Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive augmented Kripke frame. Then $\mathfrak {F}$ is a descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame iff $\mathfrak F$ is transitive and $A\subseteq \mu (A)\cup R^{-1}\mu (A)$ for each clopen A.

Thus, a descriptive augmented Kripke frame is a descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame iff it is transitive and each point in a clopen set is either in the irreflexive maximum of the clopen or sees a point in the irreflexive maximum. It was observed by Japaridze that $\mathsf {MGL}$ has the finite model property.

Theorem 2.30. [Reference Japaridze30]

$\mathsf {MGL}\vdash \varphi \Leftrightarrow \mathfrak {F}\vDash \varphi $ for all finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frames $\mathfrak {F}$ .

3 The Gödel and splitting translations in the monadic setting

In this section we discuss the Gödel and splitting translations in the monadic setting. While the Gödel translation embeds $\mathsf {MIPC}$ fully and faithfully into $\mathsf {MGrz}$ , the splitting translation from $\mathsf {MGrz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ does not yield a faithful embedding.

3.1 Gödel translation

The Gödel translation extends to the monadic setting by defining

$$ \begin{align*} (\forall\varphi)^t & = \square\forall \varphi^t,\\ (\exists\varphi)^t & = \exists \varphi^t. \end{align*} $$

Using algebraic semantics, Fisher-Servi [Reference Fischer-Servi22, Reference Fischer-Servi23] proved that this provides a full and faithful embedding of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ into $\mathsf {MS4}$ . The proof also yields a full and faithful embedding of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ into $\mathsf {MGrz}$ . Below we give an alternate proof of this result, using relational semantics. The proof extends a semantical proof that $\mathsf {IPC}\vdash \varphi $ iff $\mathsf {S4}\vdash \varphi ^t$ as given, e.g., in [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, pp. 96–97].

For notational simplicity, we abbreviate the formula $\square \forall \psi $ as $\blacksquare \psi $ and the formula $\lozenge \exists \psi $ as $\blacklozenge \psi $ . Observe that this keeps the duality between box and diamond since $\blacksquare \psi =\square \forall \psi =\neg \lozenge \neg \neg \exists \neg \psi ,$ which is provably equivalent to $\neg \lozenge \exists \neg \psi =\neg \blacklozenge \neg \psi $ .

Remark 3.1. The modalities $\blacksquare ,\blacklozenge $ are $\mathsf {S4}$ -modalities which can be modeled using the relation $Q=E\circ R$ , i.e., we have

$$\begin{align*}& w \vDash\blacksquare\varphi\quad\text{iff}\quad (\text{for all } v)(wQv \text{ implies } v\vDash\varphi);\\ & w \vDash\blacklozenge\varphi\quad\text{iff}\quad (\text{there exists } v)(wQv\text{ and } v\vDash\varphi). \end{align*}$$

Using this notation, the $\forall $ -step in the Gödel translation is

$$ \begin{align*} (\forall\varphi)^t & = \blacksquare \varphi^t. \end{align*} $$

For an $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W, R, E)$ define an equivalence relation $\sim $ on $\mathfrak {F}$ by

$$ \begin{align*} x\sim y\text{ iff } xRy \text{ and } yRx. \end{align*} $$

Let $[x]$ be the equivalence class of x, and let $W_{\sim }=W/{\sim }$ be the set of all equivalence classes. Define $R_{\sim }$ and $E_{\sim }$ on $W_{\sim }$ by

$$ \begin{align*} [x] R_{\sim} [y] \quad &\text{iff} \quad xRy; \quad \\ [x] E_{\sim} [y] \quad &\text{iff} \quad xQy \text{ and } yQx. \end{align*} $$

That $E_\sim $ is well defined follows from $R \circ Q \circ R \subseteq Q$ which is true by commutativity in $\mathfrak F$ and transitivity of R. Let $\mathfrak {F}_{\sim }=(W_{\sim }, R_{\sim }, E_{\sim })$ . Set $Q_\sim = E_\sim \circ R_\sim $ .

Lemma 3.2. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W, R, E)$ be an $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame and $x, y \in W$ .

  1. 1. $x E y$ implies $[x] E_\sim [y]$ ;

  2. 2. $x Q y$ iff $[x] Q_\sim [y]$ .

Proof. (1) If $x E y$ , then $x Q y$ and $y Q x$ , so $[x] E_\sim [y]$ by definition of $E_\sim $ .

(2) Suppose that $x Q y$ . Then there is $y'$ with $x R y'$ and $y' E y$ . Therefore, $[x] R_{\sim} [y']$ by definition of $R_{\sim}$ and $[y'] E_\sim [y]$ by (1). Thus, $[x] Q_\sim [y]$ . Conversely, if $[x] Q_\sim [y]$ , then there is $[y']$ with $[x] R_\sim [y']$ and $[y'] E_\sim [y]$ . By the definitions of $R_\sim $ and $E_\sim $ , we have $x R y'$ and $y' Q y$ . Thus, $x Q y$ .⊣

Lemma 3.3. $\mathfrak {F}_{\sim }$ is an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame.

Proof. It is well known (and easy to verify) that $R_{\sim }$ is a partial order (see, e.g., [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, p. 68]). Transitivity and reflexivity of $E_\sim $ easily follow from transitivity and reflexivity of Q, and $E_\sim $ is symmetric by definition. To see that $\mathfrak {F}_{\sim }$ satisfies commutativity, let $[x], [y], [z] \in W_\sim $ with $[x] E_\sim [y]$ and $[y] R_\sim [z]$ . Then $xQy$ and $yRz$ , so $xQz$ . Therefore, there is $z'$ with $x R z'$ and $z' E z$ . From $xRz'$ it follows that $[x] R [z']$ , and $z' E z$ implies $[z'] E_\sim [z]$ by Lemma 3.2(1). Thus, $\mathfrak F_\sim $ satisfies commutativity.⊣

Given a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , define a valuation $\nu _{\sim }$ on $\mathfrak F_{\sim }$ by

$$ \begin{align*} \nu_{\sim}(p)=\{[x]\mid x\in \nu(\square p)\}. \end{align*} $$

Clearly $\nu _{\sim }(p)$ is an upset. We call $\mathfrak F_{\sim }$ the skeleton of $\mathfrak F$ and $(\mathfrak F_{\sim }, \nu _\sim )$ the skeleton of $(\mathfrak F, \nu )$ .

Conversely, given an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ , we regard it as an $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame. In addition, if $\mathfrak F$ is finite, then we regard it as a finite $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame. If $\nu $ is a valuation on the $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ , then we regard it as a valuation on the $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ .

The following lemma describes how the above frame transformations behave with respect to the Gödel translation. It is proved by induction on the complexity of $\varphi $ .

Lemma 3.4. Let $\varphi $ be a formula of $\mathcal {L}_{\forall \exists }$ .

  1. 1. For an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ with a valuation $\nu $ and every $x \in \mathfrak F$ we have

    $$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak F, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak F, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi^t. \end{align*} $$
  2. 2. For an $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ with a valuation $\nu $ and every $x \in \mathfrak F$ , we have

    $$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak F, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi^t \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak F_{\sim}, [x]) \models_{\nu_{\sim}}\varphi. \end{align*} $$

Proof. If $\mathfrak F$ is an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame, then $\mathfrak F_\sim $ is isomorphic to $\mathfrak F$ . Therefore, (1) follows from (2). To prove (2), by [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, Lemma 3.81], it is sufficient to only consider the case for the modalities $\forall $ and $\exists $ . Let $\varphi =\forall \psi $ . Then

$$\begin{align*} \quad[x] \vDash \forall\psi \quad &\Leftrightarrow\quad (\mbox{for all } [y]) ([x]Q_\sim [y] \Rightarrow [y]\vDash \psi) \\ &\Leftrightarrow\quad (\mbox{for all } [y]) ([x]Q_\sim[y] \Rightarrow y\vDash \psi^t) \quad\text{(Inductive Hypothesis)} &\\ &\Leftrightarrow\quad (\mbox{for all } y) (xQy \Rightarrow y \vDash \psi^t) \quad\text{(Lemma 3.2(2))} \\ &\Leftrightarrow\quad x\vDash \blacksquare \psi^t \\ &\Leftrightarrow\quad x\vDash (\forall\psi)^t. \end{align*}$$

Next let $\varphi =\exists \psi $ . If $x \models (\exists \psi )^t $ , then there is y with $x Ey $ and $y \models \psi ^t $ . Therefore, $[y] \models \psi $ by the inductive hypothesis, and $[x] E_{\sim} [y]$ by Lemma 3.2(1). Thus, $[x] \models \exists \psi $ . Conversely, suppose that $[x] \models \exists \psi $ . Then there is $[y]$ with $[x] E_\sim [y]$ and $[y] \models \psi $ . Therefore, $y Q x$ by the definition of $E_\sim $ . Thus, there is $x'$ with $y R x'$ and $x' E x$ . By the definition of $R_\sim $ , we have $[y] R_\sim [x']$ . So $[x'] \models \psi $ by persistence in $\mathfrak F_\sim $ . Consequently, $x' \models \psi ^t$ by the inductive hypothesis, so $x\models\exists\psi^t$ , and hence $x\models (\exists\psi)^t$ .⊣

Theorem 3.5. $ \mathsf {MIPC}\vdash \varphi \text { iff } \mathsf {MS4}\vdash \varphi ^t \text { iff } \mathsf {MGrz}\vdash \varphi ^t$ .

Proof. Suppose that $\mathsf {MIPC}\not \vdash \varphi $ . Since $\mathsf {MIPC}$ has the FMP (Theorem 2.10), there exists a finite $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and $x \in \mathfrak F$ such that $x \not \models _\nu \varphi $ . Viewing $\mathfrak F$ as an $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame, $x \not \models _\nu \varphi ^t$ by Lemma 3.4(1). Therefore, $\mathsf {MGrz}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ . Since $\mathsf {MS4}\subseteq \mathsf {MGrz}$ , it follows that $\mathsf {MS4}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ .

Conversely, if $\mathsf {MGrz}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ , then $\mathsf {MS4}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ . By the FMP for $\mathsf {MS4}$ (see Theorem 2.21), there is a finite $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and $x \in \mathfrak F$ such that $(\mathfrak F, x) \not \models _{\nu } \varphi ^t$ . By Lemma 3.4(2), $(\mathfrak F_{\sim }, [x]) \not \models _{\nu _{\sim }}\varphi $ . Thus, $\mathsf {MIPC}\not \vdash \varphi $ .⊣

3.2 Splitting translation

Next we discuss the splitting translation in the monadic setting. The key here is Esakia’s observation that the splitting translation does not yield a faithful embedding of $\mathsf {MGrz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ . Since this result is unpublished, we give a proof of it.

Definition 3.6. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be an augmented Kripke frame (modal or intuitionistic), and let $x\in W$ .

  1. 1. An E-cluster (or cluster) is a subset of W of the form

    $$ \begin{align*} E(x)=\{w\in W \mid xEw\} \end{align*} $$
    (it is the equivalence class of $x\in W$ with respect to E).
  2. 2. We say that the E-cluster $E(x)$ is dirty if there are $u,v\in E(x)$ with $u\not =v$ and $uRv$ .

  3. 3. We say that the cluster is clean otherwise; that is, $u,v\in E(x)$ and $uRv$ imply $u=v$ :

Descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frames have the property that clusters in the irreflexive maximum of an E-saturated clopen are clean.

Lemma 3.7. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame. For clopen A and $m\in \mu (E(A))$ we have that $E(m)$ is clean.

Proof. Suppose there exist clopen A and $m\in \mu (E(A))$ with $E(m)$ dirty. Then there are $x,y\in E(m)$ with $xRy$ , $xEy$ , and $x\not =y$ . By commutativity, there is $w$ such that $mRw$ and $wEy$ , as shown below:

Since $y\in E(A)$ we have $w\in E(A)$ . But this contradicts $R(m)\cap E(A)=\varnothing $ . Thus, we cannot have a dirty cluster in $\mu (E(A))$ .⊣

As a consequence of Lemma 3.7, we obtain:

Lemma 3.8. Finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frames are finite strict partial orders in which all clusters are clean.

We next show that the splitting translation of the Gödel translation of the monadic version of Casari’s formula

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{MCas: }\quad\forall\left(\left(p\rightarrow\forall p\right)\rightarrow\forall p\right)\rightarrow \forall p \end{align*} $$

is provable in $\mathsf {MGL}$ .

Since $\square \forall p\leftrightarrow \square \forall \square p$ is provable in $\mathsf {MS4}$ , it is straightforward to check that $(\mathsf {MCas})^t$ is provably equivalent to $\square \forall \big (\square (\square p\rightarrow \square \forall p)\rightarrow \square \forall p\big )\rightarrow \square \forall p$ . Using the notation $\blacksquare $ introduced above, we have that $(\mathsf {MCas})^t$ is:

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M_\Box Cas}: \quad\blacksquare\big(\square(\square p\rightarrow\blacksquare p)\rightarrow\blacksquare p\big)\rightarrow\blacksquare p. \end{align*} $$

We use $\blacksquare ^{+}\psi $ to abbreviate $\forall \psi \wedge \square \forall \psi =\square ^{+}\forall \psi $ . Then the splitting translation of $\mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ is

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathsf{M_\Box Cas})^s = \blacksquare^{+}\big(\square^{+}(\square^{+}p\rightarrow\blacksquare^{+} p)\rightarrow\blacksquare^{+} p\big)\rightarrow\blacksquare^{+} p. \end{align*} $$

Theorem 3.9. $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash (\mathsf {M_\Box Cas})^s$ .

Proof. Suppose $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ is a descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame. We will prove that $\mathfrak {F}\vDash (\mathsf {M_\Box Cas})^s$ . Let $\nu $ be a valuation on $\mathfrak F$ , $x \in \mathfrak F$ , and $x\not \vDash _\nu \blacksquare ^{+}p$ . We show that $x\not \vDash \blacksquare ^{+}(\square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p)\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p)$ . Let $A=W\setminus \nu (\blacksquare ^{+}p)$ . Then $x \in A$ and so by Lemma 2.29, $x\in \mu (A)\cup R^{-1}\mu (A)$ . If $x \in R^{-1}\mu (A)$ , then there is $x' \in \mu (A)$ with $x R x'$ . If $x \in \mu (A)$ , we let $x' = x$ . From $x' \in \mu (A)$ it follows that $x' \in A$ , so $x' \not \models \blacksquare ^{+}p= \forall p \wedge \Box \forall p$ . We show that $x' \not \models \forall p$ . If $x' \not \models \Box \forall p$ , then there is y with $x'Ry$ and $y \not \models \forall p$ . Therefore, $y \not \models \blacksquare ^{+} p$ , so $y \in A$ . But this contradicts $x' \in \mu (A)$ . Thus, $x' \not \models \forall p$ . So there is w with $w E x'$ and $w \not \models p$ . We show that

$$ \begin{align*} w \not \models \square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p) \rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p. \end{align*} $$

Since $w\not \vDash p$ , we have $w\not \vDash p\wedge \square p$ , so $w\not \vDash \square ^{+} p$ , and hence $w\vDash \square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p$ . Let $w R z$ . By commutativity, there is y such that $x'Ry$ and $yEz$ . Since $x' \in \mu (A)$ , we have $y \not \in A$ . Therefore, $y\vDash \blacksquare ^{+}p$ , so $y\vDash \forall p$ , and hence $z\vDash \forall p$ :

In fact, if $zRt$ , then $wRt$ by transitivity, and so by the same reasoning as above we have $t\vDash \forall p$ . It follows that $z\vDash \Box \forall p$ , and so $z\vDash \blacksquare ^{+}p$ . Thus, $z\vDash \square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p$ , and hence $w\vDash \square (\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p)$ . This together with $w\vDash \square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+}p$ yields $w\vDash \square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p)$ . Since $w\not \vDash \blacksquare ^{+} p$ , we obtain $w \not \vDash \square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p) \rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p$ .

If $x = x'$ , then $x E w$ , and so $x \not \vDash \forall (\square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p) \rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p)$ . Otherwise, $x R x'$ and $x' Ew$ imply $x Q w$ , so $x \not \models \blacksquare (\square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p) \rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p)$ . Thus, in either case, $x \not \models \blacksquare ^+ (\square ^{+}(\square ^{+}p\rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p) \rightarrow \blacksquare ^{+} p)$ as desired. This yields $x\vDash (\mathsf {M_\Box Cas})^s$ . Since x was arbitrary, $\mathfrak {F}\vDash (\mathsf {M_\Box Cas})^s$ . Because $\mathfrak F$ is an arbitrary descriptive $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame, by Theorem 2.28(2), $\mathsf {MGL}\vdash (\mathsf {M_\Box Cas})^s$ .⊣

Theorem 3.10. $\mathsf {MGrz}\not \vdash \mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ .

Proof. Consider the $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ where $W=\{x,y\}$ , $R=\{(x,x),(y,y),(x,y)\}$ , and $E=W^{2}=\{(x,x),(y,y),(x,y),(y,x)\}$ , as shown below:

The arrow represents the nontrivial R-relation and the circle represents that both points are in the same E-equivalence class. It is easy to see that this is an $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame. Let $\nu $ be a valuation on $\mathfrak {F}$ with $\nu (p)=\{y\}$ . We first show that

$$ \begin{align*} x\vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p). \end{align*} $$

Note that $x\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ and $y\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ , but since $y\vDash p$ and y only sees itself (with respect to R), we have $y\vDash \square p$ . Therefore, $y\not \vDash \square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ , so $x\not \vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ , and hence $x\vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ . Moreover, since $y\not \vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ , we have $y\vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ , and hence $x\vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ . However, $x\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ as $xQx$ and $x\not \vDash p$ . Thus, $x\not \vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ , so $\mathfrak {F}\not \vDash _{\mathsf {MGrz}}\mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ , and hence $\mathsf {MGrz}\not \vdash \mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ .⊣

As an immediate consequence of Theorems 3.9 and 3.10, we obtain:

Corollary 3.11 (Esakia)

The splitting translation does not embed $\mathsf {MGrz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ faithfully.

4 The logics $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$

In the previous section we saw that the splitting translation does not embed $\mathsf {MGrz}$ into $\mathsf {MGL}$ faithfully. In fact, the Gödel translation of $\mathsf {MCas}$ is not provable in $\mathsf {MGrz}$ , but the splitting translation of the Gödel translation of $\mathsf {MCas}$ is provable in $\mathsf {MGL}$ . To repair this disbalance, Esakia suggested to strengthen $\mathsf {MIPC}$ with $\mathsf {MCas}$ and $\mathsf {MGrz}$ with the Gödel translation of $\mathsf {MCas}$ . This is what we do in this section.

4.1 $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$

Definition 4.1. The logic $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ is defined as the extension of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ by $\mathsf {MCas}$ :

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M^{+}IPC}=\mathsf{MIPC}+\mathsf{MCas}. \end{align*} $$

Recall from Definition 3.6 that a cluster of an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame is called clean if no distinct points in the cluster are R-related. The following semantic characterization of $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frames was established by Esakia. For a proof see [Reference Bezhanishvili5, Lemma 38]. It states that a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame is a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame iff the cluster of each point in the R-maximum of the E-saturation of a clopen set is clean.

Lemma 4.2. [Reference Bezhanishvili5, Lemma 38]

Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame. Then $\mathfrak {F}\vDash \mathsf {MCas}$ iff for each clopen A, if $m\in \max E(A)$ , then $E(m)$ is clean.

Remark 4.3. The condition in [Reference Bezhanishvili5, Lemma 38] is that $\mathfrak {F}\vDash \mathsf {MCas}$ iff for each clopen A we have $A\subseteq Q^{-1}(\max A\cap \max Q^{-1}A)$ . But, as discussed after the proof of [Reference Bezhanishvili5, Lemma 38], this statement is equivalent to the statement in Lemma 4.2.

As a consequence of Lemma 4.2, we obtain:

Lemma 4.4. Finite $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ -frames are finite $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frames in which all clusters are clean.

4.2 $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$

Definition 4.5. The logic $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ is the extension of $\mathsf {MGrz}$ by $\mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ :

$$ \begin{align*} \mathsf{M^{+}Grz}=\mathsf{MGrz}+\mathsf{M_\Box Cas}. \end{align*} $$

Remark 4.6. As we pointed out in the previous section, $\mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ is provably equivalent to the Gödel translation of $\mathsf {MCas}$ .

In order to obtain a semantic characterization of $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ , which is an analogue of Lemma 4.2, we require the following lemma.

Lemma 4.7. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame, $A \subseteq W$ clopen, and $y \in \max E(A)$ . If $E(y)$ is clean, then:

  1. 1. $E(y) \subseteq \max E(A)$ .

  2. 2. For all $z \in W$ , from $yR z$ and $z R y$ it follows that $y = z$ .

Proof. (1) Let $z \in E(y)$ and $w \in E(A)$ with $ z R w$ . By commutativity, there is $w'$ with $y R w'$ and $w' E w$ . Therefore, $w' \in E(A)$ . Since $y \in \max E(A)$ , we have $y=w'$ . Thus, $z, w \in E(y)$ and $z R w$ . As $E(y)$ is clean, $z = w$ . This shows that $z \in \max E(A)$ .

(2) Suppose $yR z$ and $z R y$ . From $y \in E (A)$ and $yRy$ , we have $y \in R^{-1}E(A)$ . We show that $y \in \text {q}\hspace {-.25em}\max R^{-1}E(A)$ . Let $yRw$ and $w\in R^{-1}E(A)$ , so $wRu$ for some $u\in E(A)$ . Then $yRu$ by transitivity, and $y\in \max E(A)$ implies $y=u$ , hence $wRy$ , and so $y\in \text {q}\hspace {-.25em}\max R^{-1}E(A)$ . By Lemma 2.26(1), this means $y\in \max R^{-1}E(A)$ . Since $zR y$ , we have $z \in R^{-1}E(A)$ , so $yRz$ implies $z=y$ . ⊣

We now have the necessary machinery to prove a semantic characterization of $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ , which states that a descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame is a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frame iff the cluster of every point in the maximum of the E-saturation of a clopen set is clean.

Lemma 4.8. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a descriptive $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frame. Then ${\mathfrak {F}\vDash \mathsf {M_\Box Cas}}$ iff for each clopen A and $m\in \max E(A)$ we have that $E(m)$ is clean.

Proof. First suppose $\mathfrak {F}\not \vDash \mathsf {M_\Box Cas}$ . Then there is $x\in W$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} x\not \vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p, \end{align*} $$

and hence $x\vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ but $x\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ . Since $x\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ , there is $x' \in W$ such that $xQx'$ and $x'\not \vDash p$ . Let $A=\{w\in W \mid w\not \vDash p\}$ . Then $x'\in A$ , and as $x'Ex'$ , we have $x' \in E(A)$ . Because A is clopen, so is $E(A)$ . By Lemma 2.26(2), there is $y \in \max E(A)$ with $x'R y$ . If $E(y)$ is dirty, then we are done. So assume that $E(y)$ is clean. We show that this leads to a contradiction. Since $y \in E(A)$ , there is $y' \in A$ with $y E y'$ . By Lemma 4.7(1), $y' \in \max E(A)$ . As $x Q y'$ and $x\vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ , we have $y'\vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ . Because $y' \in A$ , we have $y'\not \vDash p$ and since $y'Qy'$ , we have $y'\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ , so we must have $y'\not \vDash \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ . Thus, there is $z\in W$ such that $y'Rz$ and $z\not \vDash \square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ , which means $z\vDash \square p$ but $z\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ . Because $z\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ , there exist $w',w\in W$ such that $zRw'Ew$ and $w\not \vDash p$ (see the diagram below):

Now, since $w\not \vDash p$ , we have $w\in A$ and hence $w'\in E(A)$ . Thus, $y'Rw'$ and $w'\in E(A)$ , so by R-maximality of $y'$ in $E(A)$ , we must have $y'=w'$ . But then $y'R z$ and $z R y'$ , and so by Lemma 4.7(2), $y'=z$ . This, however, is a contradiction since $z\vDash \square p$ , hence $z\vDash p$ , whereas $y'\not \vDash p$ .

For the converse, suppose that A is clopen and $m\in \max E(A)$ with $E(m)$ dirty. First observe that since m is maximal in $E(A)$ , from $m Q t$ it follows that $t \in E(m)$ for all $t \in E(A)$ . Indeed, if $m Q t$ for $t \in E(A)$ , then there is $t'$ with $m R t'$ and $t' E t$ . Since $t' \in E(A)$ , we have $t' =m$ by maximality of m in $E(A)$ . Thus, $t \in E(m)$ .

Now, since $E(m)$ is dirty, there are $x , x' \in E(m)$ with $x R x'$ and $x \neq x'$ . In particular, $x \not \in \max E(A)$ . Since $E(A)$ is clopen, $\max E(A)$ is closed (see, e.g., [Reference Esakia20, Section III.2]). Thus, we can find clopen B such that $x\in B$ but $B\cap \max E(A)=\varnothing $ , as shown below:

Choose a valuation $\nu $ with $\nu (p)=W\setminus (B\cap E(A))$ . Note that $\nu $ is well-defined as B and $E(A)$ are clopen. We aim to show that $x\vDash \blacksquare (\square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p)$ but $x\not \vDash \blacksquare p$ . Since $x \in B\cap E(A)$ , we have $x \not \models p$ . This implies that $x \not \models \blacksquare p$ because $x Q x$ . To finish the argument it suffices to show that $y \models \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ for all y with $x Q y$ . So let $x Q y$ and assume that $y\not \models \blacksquare p$ . Then there is z with $yQ z$ and $z \not \models p$ . Therefore, $z \in B\cap E(A)$ and there is $z'$ with $y R z'$ and $z' E z$ . Clearly $z' \in E(A)$ . By Lemma 2.26(2), there is $t \in \max E(A)$ with $z'R t$ :

Since $t \in \max E(A)$ , we have $t \not \in B$ , so $t \models p$ and if $t R v$ for $t \neq v$ , then $v \not \in E(A)$ by maximality of t, so $v \models p$ . Thus, $t \models \Box p$ . On the other hand, $x Q y$ , $y R z' $ , and $z' R t$ imply $m Q t$ . As we saw above, this means $t \in E(m)$ , and so $t Ex$ . Since $x \not \models p$ , we have $t \not \models \blacksquare p$ . This yields that $t \not \models \square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ , so $y \not \models \square ( \square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p )$ , and hence $y \models \square (\square p\rightarrow \blacksquare p)\rightarrow \blacksquare p$ as desired.⊣

As a consequence of Lemma 4.8, we obtain:

Lemma 4.9. Finite $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frames are finite $\mathsf {MGrz}$ -frames in which all clusters are clean.

4.3 The translations $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}\to \mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\to \mathsf {MGL}$

The remaining part of the paper establishes the finite model property for the logics $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ . We finish this section by explaining how a proof of Esakia’s claim is then obtained.

Let R be a binary relation. We recall that the irreflexive reduction of R, denoted $R^{i}$ , is defined by

$$ \begin{align*} aR^{i}b \text{ iff } aRb \text{ and } a\not=b; \end{align*} $$

and the reflexive closure of R, denoted $R^{r}$ , is defined by

$$ \begin{align*} aR^{r}b \text{ iff } aRb \text{ or } a=b. \end{align*} $$

For an augmented Kripke frame $\mathfrak {F}=( W,R, E)$ , let $\mathfrak {F}^i=( W,R^i, E)$ and $\mathfrak {F}^{r}=( W,R^{r}, E)$ . Following the terminology of [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, pp. 98–99], we call $\mathfrak {F}^i$ the irreflexive reduction and $\mathfrak {F}^{r}$ the reflexive closure of $\mathfrak {F}$ .

Lemma 4.10.

  1. 1. If $\mathfrak F$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frame, then $\mathfrak {F}^i$ is a finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame.

  2. 2. If $\mathfrak F$ is a finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame, then $\mathfrak {F}^r$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frame.

Proof. Since finite $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frames are finite partial orders with clean clusters (Lemma 4.9) and finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frames are finite strict partial orders with clean clusters (Lemma 3.8), this is an immediate consequence of [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, pp. 98–99].⊣

Lemma 4.11. Let $\varphi $ be a formula of $\mathcal {ML}_{\forall }$ .

  1. 1. For a finite $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and every $x \in \mathfrak F$ we have

    $$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak F, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak F^i, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi^s. \end{align*} $$
  2. 2. For a finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame $\mathfrak F$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and every $x \in \mathfrak F$ we have

    $$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak F, x) \vDash_{\nu}\varphi^s \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak F^r, x) \models_{\nu}\varphi. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The proof is an immediate consequence of [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, pp. 98–99] since the quantifier modalities are not changed by the translation $(-)^s$ , nor is the relation E altered going from $\mathfrak F$ to $\mathfrak F^i$ or $\mathfrak F^r$ .⊣

We are ready to provide a proof of Esakia’s claim.

Theorem 4.12. $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}\vdash \varphi \text { iff }\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\vdash \varphi ^t \text { iff } \mathsf {MGL}\vdash (\varphi ^t)^s$ .

Proof. The first equivalence is proved exactly as Theorem 3.5 using the fact that finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frames and finite $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frames coincide.

For the second equivalence, suppose $\mathsf {MGL}\not \vdash (\varphi ^t)^s$ . Since $\mathsf {MGL}$ has the FMP, there exist a finite $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and $x \in \mathfrak F$ such that $(\mathfrak F, x)\not \vDash _{\nu }(\varphi ^t)^s$ . By Lemma 4.11(2), $(\mathfrak {F}^{r}, x) \not \vDash _{\nu }\varphi ^t$ . By Lemma 4.10(2), $\mathfrak F^r$ is an $\mathsf {M^+Grz}$ -frame. Thus, $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ . For the converse, let $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\not \vdash \varphi ^t$ . Since $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ has the FMP, there exist a finite $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}$ , a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ , and $x \in \mathfrak F$ such that $(\mathfrak {F},x)\not \models _{\nu }\varphi ^t$ . By Lemma 4.11(1), $(\mathfrak {F}^{i}, x) \not \vDash _{\nu }(\varphi ^t)^s$ . By Lemma 4.10(1), $\mathfrak F^i$ is an $\mathsf {MGL}$ -frame. Consequently, $\mathsf {MGL}\not \vdash (\varphi ^t)^s$ .⊣

This concludes lifting the original correspondences given by Goldblatt, Boolos, and Kuznetsov and Muravitsky from the propositional setting to the monadic setting, verifying Esakia’s claim. Combining this with Japaridze’s result of arithmetical completeness for $\mathsf {MGL}$ yields provability interpretations of $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ and $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ .

5 The finite model property of $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$

This section is dedicated to the proof of the finite model property of $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ . We do this by modifying the selective filtration technique originally developed by Grefe [Reference Grefe29] to prove the finite model property of Fischer Servi’s intuitionistic modal logic $\mathsf {FS}$ . In [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 10.3] it was used to give an alternative proof of the finite model property of $\mathsf {MIPC}$ .

We start by collecting some properties of descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frames that will be useful in what follows. We first give the $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -version of Lemma 4.7(1).

Lemma 5.1. Let $\mathfrak F= (W, R, E) $ be a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame, $A \subseteq W$ clopen, $y \in \max E(A)$ , and $E(y)$ clean. Then $E(y) \subseteq \max E(A)$ .

Proof. If $E(y) \not \subseteq \max E(A)$ , then there are distinct $t \in E(y)$ and $u \in E(A)$ with $t R u$ . By commutativity, there is $u'$ with $y R u'$ and $u' E u$ . Therefore, $u' \in E(A)$ , so by maximality of y in $E(A)$ we have $y = u'$ . This implies that $t E u$ , contradicting that $E(y)$ is a clean cluster.⊣

We say a point x is maximal with respect to a formula $\psi $ if $x\not \vDash \psi $ and for each y with $xRy$ and $x\neq y$ we have $y\vDash \psi $ (that is, x refutes $\psi $ and every point strictly above x validates $\psi $ ).

Lemma 5.2. Let $\mathfrak F= (W, R, E) $ be a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame, $t \in W$ , and $\nu $ a valuation on $\mathfrak F$ .

  1. 1. Let $A \subseteq W$ be clopen. If $t \in E(A)$ , then there is $x \in \max E(A)$ such that $tRx$ and $E(x)$ is clean.

  2. 2. If $t \not \models \forall \varphi $ , then there is x such that $t R x$ , x is maximal with respect to $\forall \varphi $ , and $E(x)$ is clean.

  3. 3. Let $A \subseteq W$ be clopen. If $t \in A$ , then there is $x \in A \cap \max E(A)$ such that $tQx$ and $E(x)$ is clean.

  4. 4. If $t \not \models \varphi $ , then there is x such that $t Q x $ , x is maximal with respect to $\varphi $ , and $E(x)$ is clean.

Proof. (1) Let $t \in E(A)$ . By Lemma 2.12, there is $x \in \max E(A)$ such that $tRx$ . By Lemma 4.2, $E(x)$ is clean.

(2) Suppose that $t \not \models \forall \varphi $ . Let $A = W\setminus\nu(\forall\varphi)$ . Then A is clopen, $E(A) = A$ , and $t \in E(A)$ . By (1), there is $x \in \max E(A)$ such that $tRx$ and $E(x)$ is clean. Since $E(A) =A$ , it immediately follows that x is maximal with respect to $\forall \varphi $ .

(3) Let $t \in A$ . Then $t \in E(A)$ . By (1), there is $x' \in \max E(A)$ such that $tRx'$ and $E(x')$ is clean. Since $x' \in E(A)$ , there is $x \in A$ with $x' E x$ . Therefore, $t Q x$ , and because $E(x')$ is clean, we have that $x \in \max E(A)$ by Lemma 5.1.

(4) Suppose that $t \not \models \varphi $ . Let $A = W\setminus\nu(\varphi)$ . Then A is clopen and $t \in A$ . By (3), there is $x \in A \cap \max E(A)$ such that $t Q x$ and $E(x)$ is clean. Since $x \in A$ , we also have $x \in \max A$ . But the latter means that x is maximal with respect to $\varphi $ . Thus, x is as desired.⊣

5.1 The construction

We start with a formula $\varphi $ , a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame $\mathfrak F=(W, R, E)$ , and a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ such that $\mathfrak F \not \models \varphi $ . By modifying the construction in [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 10.3], we will construct a sequence of finite $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ -frames $\mathfrak {F}_{h}=(W_{h},R_{h},E_{h})$ such that $\mathfrak {F}_{h}\subseteq \mathfrak {F}_{h+1}$ for all $h<\omega $ . For each point $t\in W_{h}$ that we select, we will be creating a copy of some original point in W. We give each added point a new name, say t, and let $\widehat {t}$ denote the original point in W that t was copied from and will behave similar to. Thus, it is possible to have two different points $x_{1}$ and $x_{2}$ in our new frame, where $\widehat {x_{1}}=\widehat {x_{2}}$ . The main difference between our construction and the construction given in [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 10.3] will be seen in the $\rightarrow $ -step, which requires a more careful selection of new points.

To start the construction, let $\mathfrak {F}_{0}=(W_{0},R_{0},E_{0})$ where

$$ \begin{align*} W_{0}=\{t_{0}\},\quad R_{0}=W_{0}^{2}, \quad E_{0}=W_{0}^{2}, \end{align*} $$

and $\widehat {t_{0}}$ is a point in W such that $\widehat {t_0}$ is from a clean cluster and is maximal with respect to $\varphi $ . The existence of such $\widehat {t_0}$ follows from Lemma 5.2(4). Moreover, let $W^{\forall H}_{-1}= \varnothing $ .

Let $\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ be the set of subformulas of $\varphi $ , and let $(W', R', E')$ be any of our frames in the construction. To each $t \in W'$ we associate the following subsets of $\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ :

$$\begin{align*} \Sigma^{\exists}(t) &= \{\exists\delta\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mid \widehat{t}\ \vDash\exists\delta\text\},\\ \Sigma^{\forall H}(t) &=\{\forall\beta\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mid \widehat{t}\text{ is maximal wrt }\forall\beta\},\\ \Sigma^{\forall V}(t) &= \{\forall\gamma\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mid \widehat {t}\ \not\vDash\forall\gamma\text{ but is not maximal wrt }\forall\gamma\},\\ \Sigma^{\rightarrow}(t) &= \{\alpha\rightarrow\sigma\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mid \widehat {t}\ \not\vDash\alpha\rightarrow\sigma \text{ and }\widehat{t}\not\vDash\alpha\}. \end{align*}$$

These are precisely the subformulas of $\varphi $ whose truth-value at $\widehat {t}$ is relevant for constructing our countermodel. Note that if $\alpha\rightarrow\sigma\in\Sigma^\rightarrow(t)$ , then $\widehat{t}$ is not maximal with respect to $\alpha\rightarrow\sigma$ .

Suppose $\mathfrak {F}_{h-1}=(W_{h-1},R_{h-1},E_{h-1})$ has already been constructed so that $\mathfrak {F}_{h-1}$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame and $E(\,\widehat {w}\;)$ is a clean cluster for each $w\in W_{h-1}$ . We construct $\mathfrak {F}_{h}$ by applying the four steps described below. They are designed to add the necessary witnesses required by the formulas in the sets $\Sigma ^{\exists }(t)$ , $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ , $\Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ , and $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ , respectively. In the $\exists $ -step we ensure that for each formula in $\Sigma ^{\exists }(t)$ the point t has an E-successor that witnesses the existential statement. In the $\forall H$ -step we ensure that for each formula in $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ the point t has an E-successor that witnesses the refutation of the universal statement. In the vertical steps $\forall V$ and $\rightarrow $ we make sure that t has the necessary R-successors that are maximal with respect to the formulas in $\Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ and $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ , respectively. In each step of the construction we add also points to witness commutativity. Note that the first three of the following four steps are only done once per cluster. This is enough since all points of a cluster in $\mathfrak F$ agree on refuting an $\forall $ - or $\exists $ -formula and points from a clean cluster agree whether such a refutation is maximal.

Roughly speaking, points are added to the construction in the following order: In the first round the cluster of the starting point $t_{0}$ is built by adding points for formulas in $\Sigma ^{\exists }(t_0)$ and $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t_0)$ . After this, no more points are added to this cluster. We call this the ‘bottom cluster’ of our frame. The first round of the construction proceeds by adding vertical witnesses for each formula in $\Sigma ^{\forall V}(t_0)$ and closing each such cluster by adding points for commutativity. The first round then finishes by adding for each point t in the ‘bottom cluster’ vertical witnesses for the formulas in $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ and closing under commutativity. In the next round all these newly built clusters will possibly be enlarged in the horizontal steps and then new vertical witnesses will be added in the $\forall V$ - and $\rightarrow $ -steps.

$\exists $ -step $($ Horizontal $)$ : Let $W^\exists _{h} = W_{h-1}$ , $R^\exists _{h} = R_{h-1}$ , and $E^\exists _{h} = E_{h-1}$ . For each $E^{\exists }_{h}(t)\subseteq W^{\exists }_{h}\backslash W_{h-1}^{\forall H}$ , if $\exists \delta \in \Sigma ^{\exists }(t)$ but there is no $s\in W^\exists _{h}$ already such that $tE^{\exists }_{h}s$ and $\widehat {s}\ \vDash \delta $ , then we add a point s to $W^\exists _{h}$ with $\widehat {s} \models \delta $ and $\widehat {t} E \widehat {s}$ . Such a point $\widehat {s}$ exists in W since $\widehat {t} \models \exists \delta $ . We then add the ordered pairs $(s,s)$ to $R^\exists _{h}$ , the ordered pairs $(t,s)$ to $E^\exists _{h}$ , and generate the least equivalence relation.

$\forall H$ -step $($ Horizontal $)$ : Let $W^{\forall H}_{h} = W^\exists _{h}$ , $R^{\forall H}_{h} = R^\exists _{h}$ , and $E^{\forall H}_{h} = E^\exists _{h} $ . For each $E^{\forall H}_{h}(t)\subseteq W^{\forall H}_{h}\backslash W_{h-1}^{\forall H}$ , if $\forall \beta \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ but there is no $s\in W_{h}^{\forall H}$ already such that $tE_{h}^{\forall H}s$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \beta $ , then we add a point s to $W_{h}^{\forall H}$ with $\widehat {s}\ \not \models \beta $ and $\widehat {t} E \widehat {s}$ . Such a point $\widehat {s}$ exists in W since $\widehat {t}$ is maximal with respect to $\forall \beta $ . We then add the ordered pairs $(s,s)$ to $R^{\forall H}_{h}$ , the ordered pairs $(t,s)$ to $E^{\forall H}_{h}$ , and generate the least equivalence relation. $\forall $ V-step $($ Vertical $)$ : Let $W^{\forall V}_{h} = W^{\forall H}_{h} $ , $R^{\forall V}_{h} = R^{\forall H}_{h}$ , and $E^{\forall V}_{h} = E^{\forall H}_{h}$ . For each $E^{\forall V}_{h}(t)\subseteq W^{\forall V}_{h}\backslash W_{h-1}^{\forall H}$ , consider $\forall \gamma \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ . Since $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \forall \gamma $ , we can pick a point $\widehat {s} \in W$ as in Lemma 5.2(2). We add the point s to $W_{h}^{\forall V}$ and $(t,s)$ to $R_{h}^{\forall V}$ .

Since W satisfies commutativity, for each $w\in E_{h}^{\forall V}(t)$ , there is $z_{w}\in W$ such that $\widehat {w}Rz_{w}$ and $z_{w}E \widehat {s}$ . To ensure commutativity is satisfied in our new frame, we add the points $s_{w}$ to $W_{h}^{\forall V}$ where $\widehat {s_{w}}=z_{w}$ . We then add $(w,s_{w})$ to $R_{h}^{\forall V}$ and take the reflexive and transitive closure. We also add $(s_{w},s)$ to $E_{h}^{\forall V}$ and generate the least equivalence relation.

$\rightarrow $ -step $($ Vertical $)$ : Let $W^{\rightarrow }_{h} = W^{\forall V}_{h} $ , $R^{\rightarrow }_{h} = R^{\forall V}_{h}$ , and $E^{\rightarrow }_{h} = E^{\forall V}_{h}$ . For each $t\in W_{h}^{\forall H} \backslash W_{h-1}^{\forall H}$ (hence including any points added in the horizontal steps above, but not in the previous vertical step), consider all $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ such that there is no $s\in W^{\rightarrow }_{h}$ already such that $tR^{\rightarrow }_{h}s$ , $\widehat{s}\vDash\alpha$ , and $\widehat{s}\not\vDash\sigma$ . Consider

$$ \begin{align*} A=[W \setminus \nu(\alpha\rightarrow\sigma)]\cap\bigcap_{\psi\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)}\{\nu(\psi):\widehat{t}\ \vDash\psi\}. \end{align*} $$

Then A is clopen and $\widehat {t} \in A$ , so by Lemma 5.2(3) there is $z \in A$ with $z \in \max E(A)$ , $\widehat {t} Q z$ , and $E(z)$ clean. We add the point s to $W_{h}^{ \rightarrow }$ where $\widehat {s}=z$ (s is a distinct new copy of z) and $(t,s)$ to $R_{h}^{ \rightarrow }$ .

Remark 5.3. It is at this step that we have altered the construction given in [Reference Gabbay, Kurucz, Wolter and Zakharyaschev25, Section 10.3], in which witnesses for implications are added in the same manner as in the $\forall V$ -step. In our version, we took an original Q-relation and turned it into an R-relation. The reason for this is that we cannot guarantee the existence of an R-successor of t that is maximal with respect to $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma $ and at the same time belongs to a clean cluster.

Before wrapping up the step, we show two properties of the chosen points.

Lemma 5.4. The point $\widehat {s}=z$ , as chosen above, is maximal with respect to $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma $ .

Proof. Let $zRu$ for some $u\not \vDash \alpha \rightarrow \sigma $ . Since $zRu$ and each $\nu (\psi )$ in $\{\nu (\psi ):\widehat {t}\ \vDash \psi \}$ is an upset, we have $u\in A$ . Because $z \in \max A$ , we obtain $z =u$ . Thus, z is maximal with respect to $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma $ .⊣

Lemma 5.5. $E(\,\widehat {t}\;)\neq E(\,\widehat {s}\;)$ .

Proof. If $E(\,\widehat {t}\;) = E(\,\widehat {s}\;)$ , then $\widehat {t}\in \max E(A)$ by Lemma 5.1. Since $\widehat {t} \in A$ , we have $\widehat {t} \in \max A$ . Therefore, the same argument as in the proof of the previous lemma yields that $\widehat {t}$ is maximal with respect to $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma $ . This contradicts the fact that $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ .⊣

We wrap up the $\rightarrow $ -step the same way as the $\forall V$ -step. Since W satisfies commutativity, for each $w\in E_{h}^{\forall V}(t)$ there is $z_w\in W$ with $\widehat {w}Rz_{w}$ and $z_w E \widehat {s}$ . We add the points $s_{w}$ to $W_{h}^{\forall V}$ where $\widehat {s_{w}}=z_{w}$ . We then add $(w,s_{w})$ to $R_{h}^{\rightarrow }$ and take the reflexive and transitive closure. We also add $(s_{w},s)$ to $E_{h}^{\rightarrow }$ and generate the least equivalence relation.

To end this stage of the construction, we let $\mathfrak {F}_{h}=(W_{h},R_{h},E_{h})$ where

$$ \begin{align*} W_{h}=W_{h}^{\rightarrow}, \ \ R_{h}=R_{h}^{\rightarrow}, \ \ E_{h}=E_{h}^{\rightarrow}. \end{align*} $$

Lemma 5.6. $\mathfrak F_{h}$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame.

Proof. First we show that $R_{h}$ is a partial order. Since in the $\exists $ - and $\forall H$ -steps we only added reflexive arrows to $R_{h-1}$ , the relation $R^{\forall H}_{h}$ is a partial order. By moving from $R^{\forall H}_{h}$ to $R_{h}$ we finished by taking the reflexive and transitive closure, hence $R_{h}$ is clearly reflexive and transitive. Antisymmetry of $R_{h}$ follows from the fact that every R-arrow added in the $\forall V$ -step and $\rightarrow $ -step is either reflexive or an arrow from a previously existing point into a freshly added point.

That $E_{h}$ is an equivalence relation is clear from the construction. Moreover, the extra points added in the $\forall V$ -step and $\rightarrow $ -step make sure that commutativity is satisfied. In fact, the added points assure commutativity for immediate successors and by transitivity this implies commutativity for the whole frame. Therefore, $\mathfrak F_{h}$ is an $\mathsf {MIPC}$ -frame.

It follows from the construction that $\mathfrak F_{h}$ is finite. Thus, by Lemma 4.4, it is left to show that $\mathfrak F_{h}$ has clean clusters. Note that in the $\exists $ -step and $\forall H$ -step all freshly introduced $E_h$ -relations are of the shape $(s, t)$ where either $s \in W_h$ and $t \in W^{\forall H}_{h} \setminus W_{h-1}$ or $s, t \in W^{\forall H}_{h} $ . Since no non-reflexive $R_{h}$ -arrows are introduced in these steps, no dirty cluster could have been built. We have already discussed the shape of the $R_{h}$ arrows introduced in the $\forall V$ -step and $\rightarrow $ -step. This guarantees that no cluster in $W^{\forall H}_{h}$ is made dirty. The freshly introduced $E_{h}$ -relations in these steps are of the shape $(s, t)$ where $s, t \in W_{h} \setminus W^{\forall H}_{h}$ . Since no non-reflexive $R_{h}$ relations exist between these points, we infer that all clusters are clean.⊣

5.2 Auxiliary lemmas

To prove that our construction terminates after finitely many steps, we require several auxiliary lemmas.

Lemma 5.7. Let $x,y\in W_h$ .

  1. 1. If $xR_{h}y$ and $x\neq y$ , then $\widehat {x}Q\widehat {y}$ and $E(\,\widehat {x}\;)\neq E(\,\widehat {y}\;)$ .

  2. 2. If $xE_{h}y$ , then $\widehat {x}E\widehat {y}$ .

  3. 3. If $xQ_{h}y$ , then $\widehat {x}Q\widehat {y}$ .

Proof. (1) Observe that in the construction each non-trivial $R_{h}$ -relation between immediate successors comes from either a non-trivial R-relation (as in the case of points added for commutativity or in the $\forall V$ -step) or a non-trivial Q-relation (as in the case of points added in the $\rightarrow $ -step). In the former case, it is obvious that $\widehat{x}Q\widehat{y}$ and $E(\,\widehat{x}\;)\neq E(\,\widehat{y}\;)$ . In the latter case, there is $w\in W$ with $\widehat {x}\neq w$ , $\widehat {x}Rw$ , and $wE\widehat {y}$ . In that case we obviously have $\widehat {x} Q \widehat {y}$ and by Lemma 5.5, $E(\,\widehat {x}\;)\neq E(\,\widehat {y}\;)$ . If the relation $x R_h y$ was added by transitivity, there is a chain $x = x_0 R_h x_1 R_h \cdots R_h x_n = y$ of immediate $R_h$ -successors to which the previous applies, hence $\widehat{x}Q\widehat{y}$ and $E(\,\widehat {x}\;)\neq E(\,\widehat {y}\;)$ by induction.

(2) It is obvious that each $E_{h}$ -relation in $W_{h}$ comes from a pre-existing E-relation in W.

(3) If $xQ_{h}y$ , then there is z with $xR_{h}z$ and $zE_{h}y$ . If $x = z$ , then $x E_h y$ , so $\widehat {x} E \widehat {y}$ by (2), and hence $\widehat {x} Q \widehat {y}$ . If $x \neq z$ , then $\widehat {x} Q \widehat {z}$ by (1). Also, $z E_{h} y$ implies $\widehat {z} E \widehat {y}$ by (2). Thus, $\widehat {x} Q \widehat {y}$ .⊣

Lemma 5.8 (Persistence)

If $u R_h w$ , then $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \psi $ implies $\widehat {w}\ \vDash \psi $ for all $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ .

Proof. Suppose $uR_{h}w$ , $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , and $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \psi $ . It suffices to show the result for an immediate $R_{h}$ -successor $w$ of u, the general result then follows by induction. We consider how the $R_{h}$ -arrow from u to $w$ was added. By construction, either $\widehat {u}R\widehat {w}$ or $w$ was added to witness some implication in $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u)$ . If $\ \widehat {u}R\widehat {w}$ , then clearly $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \psi $ implies $\widehat {w}\ \vDash \psi $ . If $w$ was added in a $\rightarrow $ -step, then $w$ is specifically chosen so that $\widehat {w}\in \nu (\gamma )$ for all $\gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ such that $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \gamma $ . Thus, $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \psi $ implies $\widehat {w}\ \vDash \psi $ .⊣

Lemma 5.9.

  1. 1. If $t E_h u$ , then $\Sigma ^{\exists }(t) =\Sigma ^{\exists }(u)$ , $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t) =\Sigma ^{\forall H}(u)$ , and $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(t) = \Sigma ^{\forall V}(u)$ .

  2. 2. If $t R_h v$ and $\exists \gamma \in \Sigma ^{\exists }(t) \cap \Sigma ^{\exists }(v)$ , then there are $u, w$ such that $t E_h u$ , $u R_h w$ , $w E_h v$ , $\widehat {u} \models \gamma $ , and $\widehat {w} \models \gamma $ .

  3. 3. If $t R_h v$ and $t\not =v$ , then $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t) \cap \Sigma ^{\forall H}(v) = \varnothing $ .

  4. 4. Along an $R_{h}$ -chain, each formula in

    $$ \begin{align*} \{\forall \psi \mid \forall \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\} \cup \{\exists \psi \mid \exists \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\} \end{align*} $$
    can serve at most once as a reason to enlarge a cluster in a horizontal step.
  5. 5. If $t R_h u$ , then $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(u) \subseteq \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ and if u was added as an immediate $R_h$ -successor to t because of $\forall \alpha \in \Sigma ^{\forall V} (t)$ , then $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(u) \subset \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ .

  6. 6. If $t R_h u$ , then $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u) \subseteq \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ and if u was added as an immediate $R_h$ -successor to t because of $\alpha \rightarrow \beta \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow } (t)$ , then $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u) \subset \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ .

Proof. (1) Suppose $t E_h u$ . Then $\widehat {t} E \widehat {u}$ by Lemma 5.7(2). Therefore, $E(\,\widehat {t}\;) = E(\,\widehat {u}\;)$ and $Q(\,\widehat {t}\;) = Q(\,\widehat {u}\;)$ . Thus, $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \exists \gamma $ iff $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \exists \gamma $ , and $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \forall \gamma $ iff $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \forall \gamma $ . Moreover, since $E(\,\widehat {t}\;)$ is a clean cluster, $\widehat {t}$ is not maximal wrt $\forall \gamma $ iff $\widehat {u}$ is not maximal wrt $\forall \gamma $ . Consequently, $\Sigma ^{\exists }(t) =\Sigma ^{\exists }(u)$ , $\Sigma ^{\forall H}(t) =\Sigma ^{\forall H}(u)$ , and $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(t) = \Sigma ^{\forall V}(u)$ .

(2) Suppose $t R_h v$ and $\exists \gamma \in \Sigma ^{\exists }(t) \cap \Sigma ^{\exists }(v)$ . By the construction, there is u with $t E_h u$ and $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \gamma $ . Since $\mathfrak F_h$ satisfies commutativity, there is $w$ with $u R_h w$ and $w E_h v$ . By Lemma 5.8, $\widehat {w}\ \vDash \gamma $ .

(3) Suppose $t R_h v$ and $t\not =v$ . Then $\widehat {t}Q\widehat {v}$ and $E(\,\widehat {t}\;) \neq E(\,\widehat {v}\;)$ by Lemma 5.7(1), so $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {v}$ . Thus, if $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ , then $\widehat {v}\ \vDash \forall \psi $ by maximality of $\widehat {t}$ , so $\forall \psi \not \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(v)$ . Conversely, if $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(v)$ , then $\widehat {t}$ cannot be maximal with respect to $\forall \psi $ , so $\forall \psi \not \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ .

(4) Let $\{v_i \mid i \in \mathbb N\}$ be an $R_h$ -chain in $W_h$ , i.e., $v_i R_h v_{i+1}$ for all $i \in \mathbb N$ . Suppose $\exists \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Let k be the least stage at which the formula $\exists \psi $ has been used to enlarge the cluster $E_{h}(v_{k})$ in a horizontal step. By (2), all $E_{h}(v_{l})$ for $l>k$ already contain a witness for $\psi $ , so no cluster above will need to be enlarged in a horizontal step to witness the formula $\exists \psi $ . Now suppose $\forall \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Let l be a stage at which the formula $\forall \psi $ has been used to enlarge the cluster $E_{h}(v_{l})$ in a horizontal step. Then $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(v_{l})$ . By (3), $\forall \psi \not \in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(v_{k})$ for $k\neq l$ . Thus, $\forall \psi $ is responsible for enlarging a cluster at most once in a horizontal step.

(5) We show the statement for immediate $R_{h}$ -successors only, the general case follows by induction. Suppose $t R_h u$ and $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall V }(u)$ . If $t=u$ , then the result is clear. Suppose $t \neq u$ . Since $tR_{h}u$ , either $\widehat {t} R \widehat {u}$ in W or u was added as a successor of t in some $\rightarrow $ -step. If $\ \widehat {t} R \widehat {u}$ , then $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall V }(t)$ by persistence (see Lemma 5.8). Suppose u was added as an $R_h$ -successor to t as a witness to some implication. By the choice of u, we have $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \chi $ for all $\chi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ with $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \chi $ . Therefore, if $\ \widehat {t}\ \vDash \forall \psi $ , then we would have $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \forall \psi $ , contradicting $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(u)$ . Thus, we must have $\widehat {t}\ \not \models \forall \psi $ . Moreover, since $\widehat {t}R\widehat {u}$ , $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {u}$ , and $\widehat {u}\ \not \vDash \forall \psi $ , we have that $\widehat {t}$ is not maximal with respect to $\forall \psi $ , so $\forall \psi \in \Sigma ^{\forall V} (t)$ . Consequently, we have $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(u) \subseteq \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ .

Suppose that u was added as an immediate $R_{h}$ -successor to t because of $\forall \alpha \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ . Since $\forall \alpha \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ , we have $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \forall \alpha $ but $\widehat {t}$ is not maximal with respect to $\forall \alpha $ . Since u was added as an immediate $R_{h}$ -successor of t because of $\forall \alpha $ , we specifically chose u so that $\widehat {u}\ \not \vDash \forall \alpha $ maximally, hence $\forall \alpha \not \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(u)$ .

(6) We show the statement for immediate $R_h$ -successors only, the general case follows by induction. Suppose $tR_{h}u$ and $\alpha \rightarrow \beta \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u)$ . Then $\widehat {u}\ \not \vDash \alpha \rightarrow \beta $ and $\widehat {u}\ \not \vDash \alpha $ . If $t=u$ , then the result is clear. Suppose $t \neq u$ . Since $t R_h u$ , either $\widehat {t} R \widehat {u}$ in W or u was added as a successor of t in some $\rightarrow $ -step. If $\ \widehat {t} R \widehat {u}$ , then $\alpha \rightarrow \beta \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ by persistence (see Lemma 5.8). Suppose u was added as an $R_h$ -successor to t as a witness to some implication. By the choice of u, we have $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \psi $ for all $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ with $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \psi $ . Therefore, we must have $\widehat {t}\ \not \models \alpha \rightarrow \beta $ and $\widehat {t}\ \not \models \alpha $ , so $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u) \subseteq \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ . Moreover, if $u$ was added as an immediate $R_h$ successor to $t$ because of $\alpha\rightarrow\beta$ , then $\widehat {u}$ refutes $\alpha \rightarrow \beta $ maximally (Lemma 5.4), and hence $\widehat {u}\ \vDash \alpha $ . Thus, $\alpha \rightarrow \beta \not \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(u)$ . ⊣

5.3 Termination of the construction

With the aid of the auxiliary lemmas of the previous section, we will now prove that the end result of our construction is a finite frame. We will do this by looking at three important parameters of our frame: cluster size, R-branching, and R-depth.

Definition 5.10.

  1. 1. A frame $\mathfrak {F}$ has bounded cluster size if there exists $k\in \mathbb {N}$ such that $|E(t)|\leq k$ for all $t\in W$ .

  2. 2. A frame $\mathfrak {F}$ has bounded R-branching if there exists $m\in \mathbb {N}$ such that t has at most m distinct immediate R-successors for all $t\in W$ .

  3. 3. A frame $\mathfrak {F}$ has bounded R-depth if there exists $n\in \mathbb {N}$ such that there is no R-chain in $\mathfrak {F}$ with more than n distinct elements.

We call $\mathfrak{F} =(W,R,E)$ rooted if there exists $w\in W$ , called a root of $\mathfrak F$ , such that $W=Q(w)$ .

Lemma 5.11. Let $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ be a partially ordered rooted augmented Kripke frame. If $\mathfrak {F}$ has bounded cluster size, bounded R-branching, and bounded R-depth, then $\mathfrak F$ is finite.

Proof. Suppose $\mathfrak {F}=(W,R,E)$ is a partially ordered rooted augmented Kripke frame with bounded cluster size, R-branching, and R-depth. Consider the quotient $(W/{E},R_{E})$ whose worlds are the clusters $E(x)$ where $x\in W$ and $E(x)R_{E}E(y)$ iff $xQ y$ . To see that $R_{E}$ is well defined, suppose $x Q y$ , $x' \in E(x)$ , and $y' \in E(y)$ . Then $x'ExQyEy'$ , so $x'Qy'$ , and hence $R_E$ is well defined.

Because Q is reflexive and transitive, so is $R_E$ . Since R is a partial order and $\mathfrak F$ has bounded R-depth, from $x Q y $ and $y Q x$ it follows that $x E y$ by [Reference Bezhanishvili4, Lemma 3(b)]. This shows that $R_E$ is anti-symmetric, and hence a partial order. Clearly $(W/{E},R_{E})$ is rooted since so is $\mathfrak F$ . Using commutativity in $\mathfrak F$ it is easy to verify that $(W/{E},R_{E})$ inherits bounded depth and bounded branching from $\mathfrak F$ . Since every rooted partial order with these properties is finite, we have that $W/E$ is finite. Because W has bounded cluster size, we conclude that W is finite too.⊣

Let $m_{1},m_{2},m_{3}$ be the non-negative integers

$$\begin{align*}m_{1} &= |\{\exists\psi \mid \exists\psi\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\}|,\\ m_{2} &= |\{\forall\psi \mid \forall\psi\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\}|,\\ m_{3} &= |\{\psi\rightarrow\chi \mid \psi\rightarrow\chi\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\}|. \end{align*}$$

Lemma 5.12. For all $h<\omega $ , the cluster size of $\mathfrak {F}_{h}=(W_{h},R_{h},E_{h})$ is bounded by $1+m_1+m_2$ .

Proof. Recall how the clusters of our frame are built. The ‘bottom cluster’ of the starting point $t_{0}$ contains points added via the horizontal $\exists $ - and $\forall H$ -steps. After this, no more points are added to this cluster.

All other clusters are constructed as follows. First points of a new cluster are added via the vertical $\forall V$ - or $\rightarrow $ -steps, and then the cluster is enlarged by the points added for commutativity. We refer to this stage as the ‘building phase’ of the cluster. In the next round of the construction, the cluster is (possibly) enlarged via the two horizontal steps. After this, no more points are added to the cluster. In the horizontal steps, we enlarge the cluster for only two different reasons:

$$ \begin{align*} \exists\gamma\in\Sigma^{\exists}(t) \mbox{ or } \forall\gamma\in\Sigma^{\forall H}(t). \end{align*} $$

Thus, each enlargement of a cluster after its building phase is due to a formula in $ \{\forall \psi \mid \forall \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\} \cup \{\exists \psi \mid \exists \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\}. $ At the end of its building phase, the bottom cluster contains just one point. Observe that every cluster can be reached from the bottom cluster by an $R_h$ -chain. It follows from Lemma 5.9(4) that every formula in $\{\forall \psi \mid \forall \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\} \cup \{\exists \psi \mid \exists \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\}$ can serve at most once as a reason to enlarge a cluster after its building phase along an $R_h$ -chain. This entails that every cluster has size at most $1 +m_1 + m_2$ .⊣

Lemma 5.13. For all $h<\omega $ , the $R_{h}$ -branching of $\mathfrak {F}_{h}=(W_{h},R_{h},E_{h})$ is bounded by $m_{2} + (1+m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot m_{3}$ .

Proof. Immediate $R_h$ -successors are added in the $\forall V$ -step and $\rightarrow $ -step. First observe that since we are adding points to witness commutativity, every point in a cluster has the same number of immediate $R_h$ -successors by the end of a stage. Thus, it is enough to count the immediate successors of a point t that we picked in the $\forall V$ -step.

To such a point t we add immediate $R_h$ -successors for three different reasons:

  1. 1. $\forall \gamma \in \Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ ,

  2. 2. $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ , or

  3. 3. $\alpha \rightarrow \sigma \in \Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(y)$ for some $y \in E_h(t)$ with $y \neq t$ .

The last reason covers the case where we add an $R_h$ -successor to t to witness commutativity. Note that all reasons occur at most once for each formula in the respective sets. Therefore, reason (1) occurs at most $m_2$ -times and reason (2) at most $m_3$ -times. Finally, reason (3) occurs at most $(m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot m_{3}$ times since by Lemma 5.12 there are at most $m_1+ m_2$ points apart from t in the cluster of t. Thus, the $R_{h}$ -branching of $\mathfrak F$ is bounded by

$$ \begin{align*} m_2 + m_3 + (m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot m_{3} = m_{2} + (1+m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot m_{3} \end{align*} $$

(see the diagram below):

Lemma 5.14. For all $h<\omega $ , the $R_{h}$ -depth of $\mathfrak {F}_{h}=(W_{h},R_{h},E_{h})$ is bounded by $(1+m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot (m_{2}+m_{3})$ .

Proof. The reason for adding an immediate successor to $t \in W_h$ via an $R_h$ -relation is due to either a formula in $\Sigma ^{\forall V}(t)$ or a formula in $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(y)$ for some $y \in E_h(t)$ (as discussed in the proof of Lemma 5.13). Let s be a (not necessarily immediate) $R_h$ -successor of t. Then s could have been added via direct formula witnessing, i.e., there is an immediate predecessor $t'$ of s with $t R_h t' R_h s$ and s was added due to a formula in $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(t')$ or $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t')$ , or else s was added to satisfy commutativity.

As we saw in Lemma 5.9, moving up along an $R_{h}$ -chain, the cardinality of the sets $\Sigma ^{\forall V }(t)$ and $\Sigma ^{\rightarrow }(t)$ does not increase, and it in fact decreases whenever an $R_h$ -successor is added by direct formula witnessing. In particular, each point can have at most $m_{2}+m_{3}\ R_h$ -successors that have been added via direct formula witnessing and since in each cluster there are at most $1+m_{1}+m_{2}$ points (Lemma 5.12), we have that the total $R_h$ -depth cannot exceed

$$ \begin{align*} (1+m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot(m_{2}+m_{3}) \end{align*} $$

(see the diagram below):

Lemma 5.15. There is $h \in \mathbb N$ such that $\mathfrak F_{h'} = \mathfrak F_h$ for all $h' \geq h$ .

Proof. All points in the bottom cluster are added in round 1 and in each round we enlarge the $R_h$ -length of a path by at most one. Thus, in stage k of the construction, all $R_h$ -chains are bounded by k. The construction continues only until vertical witnesses are required. Since, by Lemma 5.14, the $R_h$ -depth of $\mathfrak F_k$ is bounded by $m = (1+m_{1}+m_{2})\cdot (m_{2}+m_{3})$ , we have $\mathfrak F_{h'} = \mathfrak F_{m+1}$ for all $h' \geq m+1$ .⊣

Set $\mathfrak {F}'=(W',R',E')$ where

$$ \begin{align*} W'=W_{h},\quad R'={R_h}, \quad E'=E_{h}, \end{align*} $$

and h is as in Lemma 5.15. Then $\mathfrak F'$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame by Lemma 5.6.

5.4 Truth lemma

Define a valuation $\nu '$ on $W'$ by

$$ \begin{align*} \nu'(p)=\{t\in W'\mid\widehat{t}\in \nu(p)\} \end{align*} $$

for $p\in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ and $\nu '(q)=\varnothing $ for variables q not occurring in $\varphi $ . That $\nu '$ is well defined follows from Lemma 5.8, which ensures that the sets $\nu '(\psi )$ are in $\mathsf {Up}(\mathfrak {F'})$ for each $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ .

Lemma 5.16 (Truth Lemma)

For all $t\in W'$ and $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , we have $t\vDash '\psi $ iff $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \psi $ .

Proof. The proof is by induction on the complexity of $\psi $ . The base cases $\psi =\bot $ and $\psi =p$ (p a propositional variable) follow from the definition, and the cases $\psi =\psi _{1}\wedge \psi _{2}$ and $\psi =\psi _{1}\vee \psi _{2}$ are easily verified. So we focus on the cases $\psi =\psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ (and hence $\psi =\neg \psi _{1}=\psi _{1}\rightarrow \bot $ ), $\psi =\exists \psi _{1}$ , and $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ .

${\rightarrow { case}}$ : Let $\psi =\psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ and $t\in W'$ . Suppose $t\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ . Then $tR's$ for some $s\in W'$ with $s\vDash '\psi _{1}$ and $s\not \,\vDash '\psi _{2}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $\widehat {s}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \psi _{2}$ . Thus, $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ . Since $tR's$ , we have $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ by persistence (Lemma 5.8).

Conversely, suppose $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ . If $\ \widehat {t}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ , then we have $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ but $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \psi _{2}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $t\vDash '\psi _{1}$ but $t\not \,\vDash '\psi _{2}$ . By construction, $tR't$ . Therefore, $t\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ . If $\ \widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}$ , then in the $\rightarrow $ -step of the stage immediately after t is added to $W'$ , we add s to $W'$ and $tR's$ where $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ maximally (Lemma 5.4). Thus, $\widehat {s}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \psi _{2}$ , so by the inductive hypothesis, $s\vDash '\psi _{1}$ and $s\not \,\vDash '\psi _{2}$ . Since $tR's$ , we conclude that $t\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}\rightarrow \psi _{2}$ .

${\exists\ { case}}$ : Let $\psi =\exists \psi _{1}$ and $t\in W'$ . Suppose $t\vDash '\exists \psi _{1}$ . Then $tE's$ for some $s\in W'$ with $s\vDash '\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $\widehat {s}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ , and $tE's$ implies $\widehat {t}E\widehat {s}$ by Lemma 5.7(2). Thus, $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \exists \psi _{1}$ .

Conversely, suppose $\widehat {t}\ \vDash \exists \psi _{1}$ . Then $\exists \psi _{1}\in \Sigma ^{\exists }(t)$ , so in the $\exists $ -step of the next stage of the construction after t is added, we add s to $W'$ and $(t,s)$ to $E'$ where s is a copy of some $\widehat {s}\in W$ with $\widehat {t}E\widehat {s}$ and $\widehat {s}\ \vDash \psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $s\vDash '\psi _{1}$ . Since $tE's$ , we conclude that $t\vDash '\exists \psi _{1}$ .

${\forall\ { case}}$ : Let $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ and $t\in W'$ . Suppose $t\not \,\vDash '\forall \psi _{1}$ . Then $tQ'w$ for some $w\in W'$ with $w\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $\widehat {w}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}$ , and $tQ'w$ implies $\widehat {t}Q\widehat {w}$ by Lemma 5.7(3). Thus, $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \forall \psi _{1}$ .

Conversely, suppose $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash \forall \psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {t}$ is maximal with respect to $\forall \psi _{1}$ , then $\forall \psi _{1}\in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(t)$ , so at some point in the construction of the next stage after t is added, we add s to $W'$ and $(t,s)$ to $E'$ where s is a copy of some $\widehat {s}\in W$ with $\widehat {t}E\widehat {s}$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $s\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}$ , so $t\not \,\vDash '\forall \psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {t}$ is not maximal, then we add s to $W'$ and $(t,s)$ to $R'$ where s is a copy of some $\widehat {s}\in W$ and $\widehat {s}$ is maximal with respect to $\forall \psi _{1}$ . Therefore, $\forall \psi _{1}\in \Sigma ^{\forall H}(s)$ , and in the next stage we add $w$ to $W'$ and $(s,w)$ to $E'$ where $\widehat {w}\in W$ and $\widehat {w}\ \not \vDash \psi _{1}$ . But then $tQ'w$ , and by the inductive hypothesis, $w\not \,\vDash '\psi _{1}$ . Thus, $t\not \,\vDash '\forall \psi _{1}$ .⊣

The FMP of $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ is now an immediate consequence of the above.

Theorem 5.17. $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ has the finite model property.

Proof. Suppose $\mathsf {M^+IPC} \not \vdash \varphi $ . By completeness of $\mathsf {M^+IPC} $ with respect to descriptive frames, there are a descriptive $\mathsf {M^+IPC} $ -frame $\mathfrak F$ and a valuation $\nu $ on $\mathfrak F$ such that $(\mathfrak F, \nu ) \not \models \varphi $ . Let $\mathfrak F'$ be the finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame constructed above. Since $t_0$ was chosen so that $\widehat {t_0}$ refutes $\varphi $ in $\mathfrak F$ , by Lemma 5.16, $t_0$ refutes $\varphi $ in $\mathfrak F'$ . We thus found a finite $\mathsf {M^+IPC}$ -frame refuting $\varphi $ .⊣

Since $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ is finitely axiomatizable and has the finite model property, it is decidable, meaning that there is an effective method for determining whether an arbitrary formula is a theorem of $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ .

Corollary 5.18. $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ is decidable.

Remark 5.19. Another consequence of Theorem 5.17 is that $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ is the monadic fragment of $\mathsf {IQ^+C}$ . This can be seen by utilizing the Translation Theorem of Ono and Suzuki (see [Reference Ono and Suzuki37, Theorem 3.5]).

6 The finite model property of $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$

In this section we prove that $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ has the finite model property. Our proof, which consists of three steps, is a mixture of selective and standard filtration techniques. The main reasons why the same technique as for $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ does not work are the lack of persistence in $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -models and the fact that witnesses for $\forall $ -formulas cannot be chosen maximally wrt Q-relations. A rough structure of the proof is as follows.

Suppose that $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}\not \vdash \varphi $ . Then there is a descriptive $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}_{0}=(W_{0},R_{0},E_{0})$ and a valuation $\nu _{0}$ on $W_{0}$ such that $\mathfrak {F}_{0}\not \vDash _{0}\varphi $ . We build a finite $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame from $\mathfrak {F}_{0}$ in three steps:

  1. 1. First we select a (possibly infinite) partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}_{1}=(W_1,R_1,E_1)$ from $\mathfrak {F}_{0}$ , in which all clusters are clean and $\varphi $ is refuted. An important feature of this step is that $R_1$ is not simply the restriction of $R_0$ to $W_1$ , but rather its strengthening. Its construction resembles the construction of R-relations from Q-relations in the $\rightarrow $ -step of the $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ -construction.

  2. 2. Next we construct a (possibly infinite) partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ from $\mathfrak {F}_{1}$ , in which all clusters are both clean and finite and $\varphi $ is refuted. In this step we use standard filtration to collapse $E_1$ -clusters of $\mathfrak F_1$ so that each cluster contains only one point representing all points that satisfy the same formulas of $\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ .

  3. 3. Finally, as in Step 1, we use selective filtration to construct a finite partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ from $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ , in which all clusters are clean (hence $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ is an $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame) and $\varphi $ is refuted. This step resembles the $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ -construction, but in order for $\mathfrak F_3$ to inherit the bounded cluster size from $\mathfrak F_2$ , we need to add only a single copy of an original point in $\mathfrak F_2$ to a cluster.

6.1 Step 1: Ensuring all clusters are clean

Let $\mathfrak {F}_{0}=(W_{0},R_{0},E_{0})$ be as above. For $x, y \in W_0$ let

We construct $\mathfrak {F}_{1}=(W_{1},R_{1},E_{1})$ as follows:

  • $W_{1}= \{x\in W_{0} \mid x\in \max _{R_0}E_{0}(A)\text { for some clopen } A \text { of } \mathfrak F_0\}$ .

  • $xR_{1}y\Leftrightarrow x=y$ or and $x\vDash _{0}\square \psi \Rightarrow y\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ for all $\square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ .

  • $xE_{1}y\Leftrightarrow xE_{0}y$ .

  • We define a valuation $\nu _1$ on $\mathfrak F_1$ by $\nu _{1}(p)=\{x \mid x\in \nu _{0}(p)\}$ for all $p\in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , and $\nu _{1}(q)=\varnothing $ for all other propositional variables q.

We first show that there is a point in $W_{1}$ which refutes $\varphi $ (in $\mathfrak F_{0}$ ).

Lemma 6.1. There is $v\in W_{0}$ such that $v\not \vDash _{0}\varphi $ and $v\in \max _{R_0}E_{0}(\nu (\neg \varphi )) ($ hence $E_{0}(v)$ is clean and $v\in W_{1})$ .

Proof. Since $\mathfrak {F}_{0}\not \vDash _{0}\varphi $ , there is $t\in W_{0}$ such that $t\not \vDash _{0}\varphi $ . Then $t\in \nu _{0}(\neg \varphi )$ , so $t\in E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ . Because $\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi )$ is clopen, $E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ is clopen. Therefore, Lemma 2.26(2) yields $u\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ with $tR_{0}u$ . Since $u\in E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ , there is $v\in W_{0}$ with $uE_{0}v$ and $v\not \vDash _{0}\varphi $ . We now show that $v$ is our desired point. Because $u\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ , the cluster $E_{0}(u)=E_{0}(v)$ is clean (Lemma 4.8). Therefore, $v\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ by Lemma 4.7(1). Now, since $v\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(\nu _{0}(\neg \varphi ))$ and $v\in \nu _{0}(\neg \varphi )$ , it is easy to see that $v$ is $R_{0}$ -maximal with respect to $\varphi $ , hence is our desired point.⊣

We next highlight some fundamental properties of $\mathfrak {F}_{1}$ .

Lemma 6.2.

  1. 1. $E_0(x) \subseteq W_0$ is a clean cluster in $\mathfrak F_0$ for all $x \in W_1$ .

  2. 2. If $x\in W_{1}$ , then $E_{0}(x)\subseteq W_{1}$ .

  3. 3. iff $xQ_{0}y$ but $xE{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{0}y$ for all $x, y \in W_1$ .

  4. 4. The restriction of to $W_1$ is a strict partial order.

  5. 5. $R_{1}$ is a partial order.

  6. 6. $E_1$ is an equivalence relation.

  7. 7. $R_{1}$ and $E_{1}$ satisfy commutativity.

  8. 8. $\mathfrak F_1$ has clean clusters.

  9. 9. For $x\in W_{1}$ and $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , if $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , then there is $y\in W_{1}$ such that $xR_{1}y$ , $y\in A \cap \max _{R_0}E_{0}(A)$ , where

    $$ \begin{align*} A=\nu_{0}(\neg\square\gamma)\cap\bigcap\{\nu_{0}(\square\psi) \mid \square\psi\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \text{ and } x\vDash_{0}\square\psi\}, \end{align*} $$
    and $y\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma\ R_{0}$ -maximally.

Proof. (1) This is an immediate consequence of Lemma 4.8.

(2) Let $x \in W_1$ and $y \in E_0(x)$ . Then $x \in \max _{R_0}E(A)$ for some clopen $A \subseteq W_0$ . Therefore, $E_0(x)$ is clean by (1), and so $y \in \max _{R_0}E(A)$ by Lemma 4.7(1). Thus, $y \in W_1$ .

(3) The implication from right to left is obvious. For the converse, suppose that $x, y \in W_1$ and there is $w\in W_0$ such that $w\neq x,\ xR_{0}w, \text { and } wE_{0}y$ . Then clearly $xQ_{0}y$ . Also, since x is from a clean cluster, $xE{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{0}w$ . Thus, $xE{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{0}y$ .

(4) Irreflexivity of on $W_1$ follows from the reflexivity of $E_0$ and (3). We show that is transitive on $W_1$ . Suppose for $x, y, z \in W_1$ . Then there are $y' \neq x$ and $z' \neq y$ with $x R_0 y'$ , $y' E_0 y$ and $y R_0 z'$ and $z' E_0 z$ . By commutativity, there is $z''$ with $y' R_0 z''$ and $z'' E_0 z$ . Therefore, $x R_0 z''$ and $z'' E_0 z$ . If we had $x = z''$ , then we would obtain $x R_0 y' R_0 x$ , and so $x = y'$ by Lemma 4.7(2). The latter contradicts the choice of $y'$ . Thus, $z'' \neq x$ and so .

(5) $R_1$ is reflexive by definition. To see that $R_1$ is transitive, suppose $x, y, z \in W_1$ with $x R_1 y R_1 z$ . Without loss of generality we may assume that $x,y,z$ are pairwise distinct. Then and , so by (4). Moreover, if $ x \models \Box \psi $ for $\Box \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , then since $x R_1 y R_1 z$ , we have $ y \models \Box \psi $ and so $z \models \Box \psi $ . Therefore, $R_1$ is transitive. Finally, if $x R_1 y R_1 x$ and $x \neq y$ , then . The latter implies by transitivity of , which contradicts irreflexivity of . Thus, $R_1$ is anti-symmetric.

(6) This is immediate since $E_0$ is an equivalence relation.

(7) Suppose that $xR_{1}y$ and $xE_{1}z$ . Without loss of generality we may assume that $x\neq y$ and $x\neq z$ . Then , so there is $u\in W_{0}$ such that $x\neq u$ , $xR_{0}u$ , and $uE_{0}y$ . By commutativity in $W_{0}$ , there is $v$ such that $zR_{0}v$ and $vE_{0}u$ . We show that $v$ is the required witness for commutativity in $W_{1}$ . From $vE_{0}u$ and $uE_{0}y$ we have $vE_{0}y$ , so $v\in W_{1}$ by (2). Because $x\neq u$ , $xR_{0}u$ , and x is from a clean cluster, we have $xE{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{0} u$ . Thus, $zE{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{0} v$ . In particular, $z\neq v$ , and so . Moreover, $zR_{0}v$ gives that if $z\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , then $v\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , so $zR_{1}v$ . From $vE_{0}y$ we have $vE_{1}y$ , yielding commutativity in $W_{1}$ .

(8) Suppose there are $x,y\in W_{1}$ with $x\neq y$ , $xE_{1}y$ , and $xR_{1}y$ . Since $xE_{1}y$ , we have $xE_{0}y$ , and because $xR_{1}y$ and $x\neq y$ , we have . Thus, there is $w\in W_{0}$ with $x\neq w$ , $xR_{0}w$ , and $wE_{0}y$ . From $xE_{0}y$ and $yE_{0}w$ we have $xE_{0}w$ . By (1), x is chosen from a clean cluster in $W_{0}$ , so $xR_{0}w$ and $xE_{0}w$ imply $x=w$ , a contradiction.

(9) Suppose $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ . Consider

$$ \begin{align*} A=\nu_{0}(\neg\square\gamma)\cap\bigcap\{\nu_{0}(\square\psi) \mid \square\psi\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mbox{ and } x\vDash_{0}\square\psi\}. \end{align*} $$

Clearly $x\in A$ , so $x\in E_{0}(A)$ . We have $x\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ or $x\not \in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ .

$ {{Case\ 1{:}}\ x\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)}$

If $x\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ , then from $xR_{0}w$ and $x\neq w$ it follows that $w\not \in E_{0}(A)$ , so $w\not \in A$ . But $xR_{0}w$ implies ${w\in \bigcap \{\nu _{0}(\square \psi ) \mid \square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi ) \mbox { and } x\vDash _{0}\square \psi \}}$ , so we must have $w\not \in \nu _{0}(\neg \square \gamma )$ . Therefore, $w\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ . Since $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ but $w\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ for all $w\neq x$ with $xR_{0}w$ , we must have $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma\ R_{0}$ -maximally.

${{Case\ 2{:}}\ x\not \in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)}$

If $x\not \in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ , then Lemma 2.26(2) yields $t\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ such that $x\neq t$ and $xR_{0}t$ . But then $tE_{0}y$ for some $y\in A$ . Since $t\in \max _{R_{0}}E_{0}(A)$ , we have $t\in W_{1}$ , so $y\in W_{1}$ by (2). From $x\neq t$ and $xR_{0}t$ it follows that . Since $y\in A$ , if $x\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ then $y\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ for all $\Box \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , so $xR_{1}y$ . From $y\in A$ it follows that $y\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ . We show that $y\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma\ R_{0}$ -maximally. Suppose $yR_{0}z$ and $z\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ . If $x\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ , then $y\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ (as $y\in A$ ), so $yR_{0}z$ implies $z\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ . Thus, $z\in A$ , hence $z\in E_{0}(A)$ , and maximality of y in $E_{0}(A)$ yields $y=z$ . Consequently, y is $R_{0}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ .⊣

We conclude Step 1 by proving the truth lemma for $\mathfrak {F}_{1}$ .

Lemma 6.3 (Truth Lemma)

For all $x\in W_{1}$ and $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak{F}_{0},x)\vDash_{0} \psi \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak{F}_{1},x)\vDash_{1}\psi. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The proof is by induction on the complexity of $\psi $ . The base case $\psi =p$ is clear from the definition of $\nu _{1}$ . The cases of $\psi =\psi _{1}\vee \psi _{2}$ and $\psi =\neg \psi _{1}$ are straightforward, so we focus on the cases $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ and $\psi =\square \psi _{1}$ .

Suppose $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ . If $x\not \vDash _{0}\forall \psi _{1}$ , then $xE_{0}y$ for some $y\not \vDash _{0}\psi _{1}$ . By Lemma 6.2(2), $y \in W_1$ , so $y\not \vDash _{1}\psi _{1}$ by the inductive hypothesis. From $xE_{0}y$ we have $xE_{1}y$ by the definition of $E_1$ . Thus, $x\not \vDash _{1}\forall \psi _{1}$ . The proof of the converse implication is immediate.

Suppose $\psi =\square \psi _{1}$ . If $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \psi _{1}$ , then by Lemma 6.2(9), there is $y\in W_{1}$ such that $xR_{1}y$ and $y\not \vDash _{0}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $y\not \vDash _{1}\psi _{1}$ , hence $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \psi _{1}$ . Conversely, if $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \psi _{1}$ , then there is $y\in W_{1}$ such that $xR_{1}y$ and $y\not \vDash _{1}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $y\not \vDash _{0}\psi _{1}$ . If $x=y$ , then $x\not \vDash _{0}\psi _{1}$ , hence $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \psi _{1}$ . If $x\neq y$ , then as $xR_{1}y$ , we have and $x\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ implies $y\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ for all $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Since $y\not \vDash _{0}\psi _{1}$ , we have $y\not \vDash _{0}\square \psi _{1}$ . Thus, $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \psi _{1}$ .⊣

6.2 Step 2: Ensuring all clusters are finite

In this step we use the standard filtration technique to construct $\mathfrak F_2$ from $\mathfrak F_1$ by ‘collapsing’ $E_{1}$ -clusters into finitely many classes. Thus, each cluster in $\mathfrak F_2$ will be finite.

Define an equivalence relation $\sim $ on $W_{1}$ by

$$ \begin{align*} x\sim y \Leftrightarrow \left(xE_{1}y \text{ and } x\vDash_{1}\gamma \Leftrightarrow y\vDash_{1}\gamma \text{ for all }\gamma\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \right). \end{align*} $$

We construct $\mathfrak {F}_{2}=(W_{2},R_{2},E_{2})$ as follows:

  • $W_{2}= W_{1}/{\sim }=\{[x] \mid x\in W_{1}\}$ where $[x]$ is the $\sim $ -equivalence class of x.

  • For $[x],[y]\in W_{2}$ , $[x]R_{2}[y]\Leftrightarrow [x]=[y]$ or $xR_{1}y$ .

  • For $[x],[y]\in W_{2}$ , $[x]E_{2}[y]\Leftrightarrow xE_{1}y$ .

  • $\nu _{2}(p)=\{[x] \mid x\in \nu _{1}(p)\}$ for all $p\in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , and $\nu _{2}(q)=\varnothing $ for all other propositional variables q.

Lemma 6.4. The relations $E_2$ and $R_2$ are well defined, and so is the valuation $\nu_2$ .

Proof. It is easy to see that $E_2$ and $\nu_2$ are well defined. We show that $R_2$ is well defined. Let $x, y, x', y' \in W_1$ with $x\sim x'$ , $y\sim y'$ , and $[x]R_{2}[y]$ . Then $[x]=[y]$ or $xR_{1}y$ . If $[x]=[y]$ , we have $[x']=[x]=[y]=[y']$ , and so $[x']R_{2}[y']$ . If $xR_{1}y$ , then $x=y$ or and $x\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ implies $y\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ for all $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . The former case implies $[x]=[y]$ which we have already considered. In the latter case, from it follows that $xQ_{0}y$ and $x E{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_0 y$ by Lemma 6.2(3). Note that $x' \sim x$ implies $x' E_1 x$ and so $x ' E_0 x$ . Similarly, $y ' E_0 y$ . By transitivity of $Q_0$ we thus have $x' Q_0 y'$ . Moreover, $x ' E_0 x$ , $y ' E_0 y$ , and $x E{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_0 y$ imply that $x' E{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_0 y'$ . Thus, by Lemma 6.2(3). If $\Box \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ and $x'\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , then $x\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ since $x' \sim x$ . So $y\vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ by assumption. But then $y' \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ since $y' \sim y$ . This shows that $x' R_1 y'$ , so $[x'] R_2 [y']$ .⊣

In the following lemma we highlight some properties of $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ .

Lemma 6.5.

  1. 1. $R_{2}$ is a partial order.

  2. 2. $E_{2}$ is an equivalence relation.

  3. 3. $R_{2}$ and $E_{2}$ satisfy commutativity.

  4. 4. $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ has clean clusters.

  5. 5. For $[x]\in W_{2}$ , $|E_{2}([x])|\leq 2^n$ , where $n=|\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi ) |$ .

  6. 6. For $[x]\in W_{2}$ and $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , if $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma $ , then there is $[y]\in W_{2}$ such that $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and $y\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma\ R_{1}$ -maximally.

Proof. (1) Reflexivity of $R_{2}$ is immediate from the definition, and transitivity and antisymmetry follow from transitivity and antisymmetry of $R_1$ .

(2) This follows from $E_1$ being an equivalence relation.

(3) This follows from $R_{1}$ and $E_{1}$ satisfying commutativity.

(4) Suppose there are $[x]\neq [y]$ in $W_2$ with $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and $[x]E_{2}[y]$ . Then $x \neq y$ , so by the definition of $R_{2}$ and $E_{2}$ , we have $xR_{1}y$ and $xE_{1}y$ which yields a dirty cluster in $\mathfrak F_1$ , contradicting Lemma 6.2(8).

(5) This follows from the fact that there are at most $2^n \sim $ -equivalence classes in each cluster (see, e.g., [Reference Chagrov and Zakharyaschev12, Proposition 5.24]).

(6) Suppose $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma $ . By Lemma 6.3, $x\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , so by Lemma 6.2(9), there is $y\in W_{1}$ such that $xR_{1}y$ , $y\in A\cap \max _{R_0}E_{0}(A)$ , and $y\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma\ R_{0}$ -maximally, where

$$ \begin{align*} A=\nu_{0}(\neg\square\gamma)\cap\bigcap\{\nu_{0}(\square\psi) \mid \square\psi\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi) \mbox{ and } x\vDash_{0}\square\psi\}. \end{align*} $$

Then $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and by Lemma 6.3, $y\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma $ . We show that y is $R_{1}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ . Suppose $yR_{1}z$ and $z\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma $ . By Lemma 6.3, $z\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , and from $yR_{1}z$ it follows that $y=z$ or and $y\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ implies $z\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ for all $\square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Suppose the latter. Since $z\not \vDash _{0}\square \gamma $ , we have $z\in \nu _{0}(\neg \square \gamma )$ . If $x\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ for $\square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , then $y\in A$ implies $y\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ . So $yR_{1}z$ then gives $z\vDash _{0}\square \psi $ . Therefore, $z\in \bigcap \{\nu _{0}(\square \psi ) \mid \square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi ) \mbox { and } x\vDash _{0}\square \psi \}$ , and hence $z\in A$ . As , there is $w\in W_{0}$ such that $y\neq w$ , $yR_{0}w$ , and $wE_{0}z$ . Then $w\in E_{0}(A)$ , and maximality of y in $E_{0}(A)$ yields $y=w$ , contradicting $y\neq w$ . Thus, $y=z$ , and so y is $R_{1}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ .⊣

We conclude Step 2 by showing the truth lemma for $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ .

Lemma 6.6 (Truth Lemma)

For all $x\in W_{1}$ and $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak{F}_{1},x)\vDash_{1} \psi \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak{F}_{2},[x])\vDash_{2}\psi. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The proof is by induction on the complexity of $\psi $ . The base case $\psi =p$ follows from the definition of $\nu _{2}$ . The cases of $\psi =\psi _{1}\vee \psi _{2}$ and $\psi =\neg \psi _{1}$ are straightforward, and the $\forall $ -case follows from the definition of $E_2$ . Suppose that $\psi = \Box \psi _1$ . If $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \psi _{1}$ , then there is $y\in W_1$ with $xR_{1}y$ and $y\not \vDash _{1}\psi _{1}$ . Therefore, $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and $[y]\not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ by the inductive hypothesis. Thus, $[x]\not \vDash _{2}\square \psi _{1}$ . Conversely, if $[x]\not \vDash _{2}\square \psi _{1}$ , then there is $y\in W_1$ with $[x] R_2 [y]$ and $[y]\not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $y \not \vDash _{1} \psi _{1}$ . If $[x] = [y]$ , then $x \not \vDash _{1} \square \psi _{1}$ by definition of $\sim $ . If $[x] \neq [y]$ , then $x R_1 y$ and again $x \not \vDash _{1} \square \psi _{1}$ .⊣

6.3 Step 3: Ensuring a finite frame

We are ready for our final step, in which we construct $\mathfrak {F}_{3}=(W_{3},R_{3},E_{3})$ by selective filtration from $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ . This is done by constructing a sequence of finite partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frames with clean clusters $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}=(W_{3.h},R_{3.h},E_{3.h})$ such that $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}\subseteq \mathfrak {F}_{3.h+1}$ for all $h<\omega $ . We then show that this construction eventually terminates.

Similar to the construction for $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ , for each point $[x]\in W_{2}$ that we select, we create a copy of the point, give it a new name, say t, and let $\widehat {t}=[x]$ denote the original point in $W_{2}$ that t represents and will behave similar to. However, we take a bit more care with the copies in this construction than in the construction for $\mathsf {M^{+}IPC}$ . In particular, we will never create two copies of the same original point within one cluster. This will ensure that the cluster size in $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ has the same bound as the cluster size in $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ .

Before we begin the construction, we highlight an important property we will need for selecting our points.

Lemma 6.7. For $[x]\in W_{2}$ and $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , if $[x]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ , then there is $[y]\in W_{2}$ such that $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and $[y]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma\ R_{2}$ -maximally.

Proof. Suppose $[x]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ . By Lemma 6.6, $x\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma $ , and by Lemma 6.5(6), there is $[y]\in W_{2}$ such that $[x]R_{2}[y]$ and $y\not \vDash _{1}\square \gamma\ R_{1}$ -maximally. Applying Lemma 6.6 again yields $[y]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ . To see that $[y]$ is $R_{2}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ , suppose $[y]R_{2}[z]$ and $[z]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ . By definition of $R_{2}$ , either $[y]=[z]$ or $yR_{1}z$ . If $yR_{1}z$ , then by $R_{1}$ -maximality of y, we have $y=z$ , so $[y]=[z]$ , and hence $[y]$ must be $R_{2}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ . ⊣

Throughout the construction, for each $t\in W_{3.h}$ , we associate the following sets of formulas:

$$\begin{align*}\Sigma^{\forall}(t) &= \{\forall\delta\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\mid\widehat {t}\ \not\vDash_{2}\forall\delta\text\},\\ \Sigma^{\square}(t) &= \{\square\gamma\in\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\mid\widehat {t}\ \not\vDash_{2}\square\gamma, \widehat{t}\ \vDash_{2}\gamma\}. \end{align*}$$

We start with $\mathfrak {F}_{3.0}=(W_{3.0},R_{3.0},E_{3.0})$ where

$$ \begin{align*}W_{3.0}=\{t_{0}\},\quad R_{3.0}=W_{3.0}^{2}, \quad E_{3.0}=W_{3.0}^{2}\end{align*} $$

and $\widehat {t_{0}}=[x_0]\in W_{2}$ is a point with $[x_0]\not \vDash _{2}\varphi $ . This will be a root of our frame and has $Q_{3}$ -depth $1$ . Let $W_{3.-1}=R_{3.-1}= E_{3.-1}= \varnothing $ . Suppose $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h-1}=(W_{3.h-1},R_{3.h-1},E_{3.h-1})$ has already been constructed and is a partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame with clean clusters. We construct $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ by the following steps.

$\forall$ -step (Horizontal): Let $W_{3.h}^{\forall }=W_{3.h-1}$ , $R_{3.h}^{\forall }=R_{3.h-1}$ , and $E_{3.h}^{\forall }=E_{3.h-1}$ . For each cluster $E_{3.h}(t)\subseteq W_{3.h-1}\backslash W_{3.h-1}^{\forall }$ , consider $\forall \delta \in \Sigma ^{\forall }(t)$ . If there is no $s\in W_{3.h}^{\forall }$ already such that $tE_{3.h}^{\forall }s$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash _{2}\delta $ , we add a witness to our new frame as follows. Since $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash _{2}\forall \delta $ , there exists $[x]\in W_{2}$ such that $\widehat {t}E_{2}[x]$ and $[x]\not \vDash _{2}\delta $ . We add the point s to $W_{3.h}^{\forall }$ where $\widehat {s}=[x]$ (s is a distinct new copy of $[x]$ ), the relations $(s,s)$ to $R_{3.h}^{\forall }$ , the relations $(t,s)$ to $E_{3.h}^{\forall }$ and generate the least equivalence relation.

$\square$ -step (Vertical): Let $W_{3.h}^{\square }=W_{3.h}^{\forall }$ , $R_{3.h}^{\square }=R_{3.h}^{\forall }$ , and $E_{3.h}^{\square }=E_{3.h}^{\forall }$ . For $t\in W_{3.h}^{\forall }\backslash W_{3.h-1}^{\forall }$ (hence including any points added in the horizontal step), consider $\square \gamma \in \Sigma ^{\square }(t)$ where $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ , but $\widehat {t}\ \vDash _{2}\gamma $ (thus, t isn’t witnessing the formula $\square \gamma $ itself), and there is no $s\in W_{3.h}^{\square }$ already such that $tR_{3.h}^{\square }s$ and $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma\ R_{2}$ -maximally. For each such $\square \gamma $ , since $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ and $\widehat {t}=[w]$ for some $[w]\in W_{2}$ , we have $[w]\not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma $ . By Lemma 6.7, there is $[x]\in W_{2}$ such that $[w]R_{2}[x]$ and $[x]$ is $R_{2}$ -maximal with respect to $\square \gamma $ . We add the point s to $W_{3.h}^{\square }$ where $\widehat {s}=[x]$ , $(t,s)$ and $(s,s)$ to $R_{3.h}^{\square }$ and close under transitivity, and add $(s,s)$ to $E_{3.h}^{\square }$ . To make sure commutativity is satisfied, for each $w\in E_{3.h}^{\square }(t)$ , if there is already $s_{w}\in E_{3.h}^{\square }(s)$ such that $\widehat {w}R_{2}\widehat {s_{w}}$ , we simply add the relation $(w, s_{w})$ to $R_{3.h}^{\square }$ . If there is no such $s_{w}$ , then by commutativity in $W_{2}$ , there is $[x_{w}]\in W_2$ such that $\widehat {w}R_{2}[x_{w}]$ and $[x_{w}]E_{2}[x]$ , so we add $s_{w}$ to $W_{3.h}^{\square }$ , where $\widehat {s_{w}}=[x_{w}]$ . We then add $(w,s_{w})$ to $R_{3.h}^{\square }$ and close it under reflexivity and transitivity, and add $(s_{w},s)$ to $E_{3.h}^{\square }$ and generate the smallest equivalence relation.

To end this stage of the construction, we let $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}=(W_{3.h},R_{3.h},E_{3.h})$ where

$$ \begin{align*}W_{3.h}= W_{3.h}^{\square}, \quad R_{3.h}= R_{3.h}^{\square}, \quad E_{3.h}= E_{3.h}^{\square}.\end{align*} $$

Lemma 6.8. $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ is a finite partially ordered $\mathsf {MS4}$ -frame with clean clusters.

Proof. That $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ is finite follows from the construction. Since in the $\forall $ -step we only added reflexive arrows to $R_{3.h}^{\forall }$ , we have that $R_{3.h}^{\forall }$ is a partial order. In the $\Box $ -step we close $R_{3.h}^{\Box }$ under reflexivity and transitivity each time we add a new arrow, so $R_{3.h}^{\Box }$ is reflexive and transitive. Moreover, we only add $R_{3.h}^{\Box }$ arrows from points that were already present in $W_{3.h}^{\forall }$ into points that are freshly added in the $\Box $ -step of round h. Thus, $R_{3.h}^{\Box }$ is antisymmetric. That $E_{3.h}$ is an equivalence relation and that $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ satisfies commutativity follow from the construction. Finally, to see that $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ has only clean clusters, note that in the $\forall $ -step all freshly introduced $E_h$ -relations are of the shape $(s, t)$ where s or $t \in W^{\forall }_{3.h} \setminus W_{3.h-1}$ . Since no non-reflexive $R_h$ -arrows are introduced in this step, no dirty cluster could have been built. We have already discussed the shape of the $R_{h}$ arrows introduced in the $\square $ -step. This guarantees that no cluster in $W^{\forall }_{3.h}$ is made dirty. The freshly introduced $E_h$ -relations in these steps are of the shape $(s, t)$ where $s, t \in W^{\square }_{3.h} \setminus W^{\forall }_{3.h}$ . Since no non-reflexive $R_h$ -relations exist between these points, we infer that all clusters are clean.⊣

The following lemma summarizes some useful properties of $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ . In the following let

$$ \begin{align*} n=\lvert\mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\rvert\ \text{ and } m= \lvert\{\square\psi \mid \square\psi\in \mathsf{Sub}(\varphi)\}\rvert. \end{align*} $$

Lemma 6.9. Let $t,u\in W_{3.h}$ .

  1. 1. If $tE_{3.h}u$ , then $\widehat {t}E_{2}\widehat {u}$ .

  2. 2. If $t E_{3.h} u$ , then $\Sigma ^{\forall }(t) =\Sigma ^{\forall }(u)$ . $($ This ensures that we only need to perform the $\forall $ -step once per cluster $)$ .

  3. 3. If $t E_{3.h}u$ and $t\neq u$ , then $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {u}$ . $($ This ensures that one cluster does not contain two different copies of the same point, so our cluster size remains bounded $)$ .

  4. 4. If , then .

  5. 5. If $tR_{3.h}u$ , then $\widehat {t}R_{2}\widehat {u}$ .

  6. 6. If , then . Thus, if , then $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {u}$ .

  7. 7. A formula $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ can be witnessed at most $2^n$ times in clusters along an $R_{3.h}$ -chain. $($ This shows that $\square \gamma $ can be witnessed at most $2^n$ times per $Q_{3.h}$ -chain. $)$

Proof. (1) This follows from the construction.

(2) By (1), $t E_{3.h}u$ implies $\widehat {t} E_{2} \widehat {u}$ , so $\widehat {t}\ \vDash _{2} \forall \gamma $ iff $\widehat {u}\ \vDash _{2}\forall \gamma $ .

(3) Suppose $t E_{3.h}u$ , $t\neq u$ , and $\widehat {t}=\widehat {u}$ . Without loss of generality assume that t was added to the cluster before u, so either u is added to witness some formula $\forall \delta _{i}$ where $\widehat {u}\ \not \vDash _{2}\delta _{i}$ , or u is added as a commutativity witness for some point from the cluster immediately below. However, by construction, u would not have been added to witness a formula $\forall \delta _{i}$ , because if $\ \widehat {u}\ \not \vDash _{2}\delta _{i}$ , then $\widehat {t}=\widehat {u}$ implies that $\widehat {t}\ \not \vDash _{2}\delta _{i}$ , so t is already a viable witness in the cluster for any such formula, contradicting the $\forall $ -step of the construction. Furthermore, u would not be added as a commutativity witness for some point $w$ in the cluster immediately below, because then in $W_{2}$ we would have $\widehat {w}R_{2}\widehat {u}$ , so $\widehat {w}R_{2}\widehat {t}$ , and a new $R_{3.h}$ -relation would have been added from $w$ to t instead, contradicting the $\square $ -step of the construction. Thus, we must have $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {u}$ .

(4) Suppose . Then there is $[w]\in W_{2}$ with $[t]\neq [w]$ , $[t]R_{2}[w]$ , and $[w]E_{2}[u]$ . From the definitions of $E_{1}$ and $E_{2}$ , $[w]E_{2}[u]$ implies $wE_{0}u$ . By definition of $R_{2}$ , $[t]R_{2}[w]$ and $[t]\neq [w]$ imply $tR_{1}w$ . Since $[t]\neq [w]$ , we have $t\neq w$ , so by the definition of $R_{1}$ . Then there is $v\in W_{1}$ with $t\neq v$ , $tR_{0}v$ , and $vE_{0}w$ . Since $vE_{0}w$ , we have $vE_{0}u$ . Thus, $t\neq v$ , $tR_{0}v$ , and $vE_{0}u$ , and hence .

(5) This follows from the construction.

(6) If , then there is $w$ such that $t\neq w$ , $tR_{3.h}w$ , and $wE_{3.h}u$ . By (5), $\widehat {t}R_{2}\widehat {w}$ and $\widehat {w}$ must come from a different cluster in $W_{2}$ than $\widehat {t}$ , so $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {w}$ . We also have $\widehat {w}E_{2}\widehat {u}$ by (1), so . Because $\mathfrak {F}_{2}$ has clean clusters, we must have $\widehat {t}\neq \widehat {u}$ .

(7) Suppose that $x_1,\ldots ,x_{2^{n}+1}$ are all in different $E_{3.h}$ -clusters along an $R_{3.h}$ -chain (where $\widehat {x}_1=[w_{1}],\ldots ,\widehat {x}_{2^{n}+1}=[w_{2^{n}+1}]$ ), so , and all have been added to witness a formula $\square \gamma \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Thus, $\widehat {x_{i}}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \gamma\ R_2$ -maximally for $i=1,\ldots ,2^{n}+1$ . Because there are only $2^{n}$ subsets of $\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ (where $n=\lvert \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )\rvert $ ), the pigeonhole principle implies that there are some i and j with $i\neq j$ (assume $i<j$ ) where $\widehat {x_i}$ and $\widehat {x_j}$ satisfy the same subformulas of $\varphi $ . By (6), and $\widehat {x_{i}}\neq \widehat {x_{j}}$ . If $\ \widehat {x_{i}}R_{2}\widehat {x_{j}}$ , then $R_{2}$ -maximality of $\widehat {x_{i}}$ with respect to $\square \gamma $ implies $\widehat {x_{i}}=\widehat {x_{j}}$ , contradicting $\widehat {x_{i}}\neq \widehat {x_{j}}$ , so we must have $\widehat {x_{i}}R{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{2}\widehat {x_{j}}$ and hence $[w_{i}]R{\kern-2pt}\!\!\!\!\ /_{2}[w_{j}]$ . Since we have . By (4), we then have . Since $[w_i]$ and $[w_j]$ satisfy the same formulas in $\mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ , we have $[w_i]\vDash _{2}\square \beta \Leftrightarrow [w_j]\vDash _{2}\square \beta $ for $\square \beta \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . By Lemmas 6.6 and 6.3, $w_{i}\vDash _{0}\square \beta \Leftrightarrow w_{j}\vDash _{0}\square \beta $ . Thus, $w_{i}R_{1}w_{j}$ and hence $[w_i]R_{2}[w_j]$ , a contradiction.⊣

We now prove that the end result of our construction is a finite frame, using the definitions of bounded cluster size, bounded R-branching, and bounded R-depth given in Definition 5.10.

Lemma 6.10. For all $h<\omega $ , the cluster size of $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}=(W_{3.h},R_{3.h},E_{3.h})$ is bounded by $2^{n}$ .

Proof. By Lemma 6.5(5), the cluster size in $\mathfrak F_2$ is bounded by $2^{n}$ , and by Lemma 6.9(3), we do not add copies of the same points to a cluster in $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}$ . Thus, cluster size in $\mathfrak F_{3.h}$ is bounded by $2^{n}$ .⊣

Lemma 6.11. For all $h<\omega $ , the $R_{3.h}$ -branching of $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}=(W_{3.h},R_{3.h},E_{3.h})$ is bounded by $2^{n}\cdot m$ .

Proof. It is sufficient to show that each $t\in W_{3.j-1}$ , for $j\leq h$ , has at most $2^{n}\cdot m$ immediate $R_{3.j}$ -successors. By construction, we add at most m-many immediate $R_{3.j}$ -successors to t for formulas of the form $\square \psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ . Each $y\in E_{3.j}(t)$ also needs at most m-many immediate $R_{3.j}$ -successors to witness $\square $ -formulas. Since there are at most $2^{n}$ -many such y (including t itself), we must add at most $2^{n}\cdot m$ immediate $R_{3.j}$ successors to t (see the diagram below):

Lemma 6.12. For all $h<\omega $ , the $R_{3.h}$ -depth of $\mathfrak {F}_{3.h}=(W_{3.h},R_{3.h},E_{3.h})$ is bounded by $2^{n}\cdot m +1$ .

Proof. By construction, to make an immediate vertical move from some cluster $E_{3.h}(t)$ to another cluster $E_{3.h}(u)$ (with $t\neq u$ ), there must be some point $x\in E_{3.h}(t)$ and formula $\square \psi \in \Sigma ^{\square }(x)$ requiring a witness y, where $y\in E_{3.h}(u)$ , $xR_{3.h}y$ , and y is added in the $\square $ -step of the construction. Starting from the bottom cluster $E_{3.h}(t_{0})$ , by Lemma 6.9(7), each of our m-many $\square $ -formulas can be witnessed at most $2^{n}$ times in clusters along an $R_{3.h}$ -chain. Thus, we add at most $2^n \cdot m$ elements to an $R_{3.h}$ chain originating from this cluster, with the total length of the chain (including the starting point) being at most $2^{n}\cdot m +1$ (see the diagram below):

Lemma 6.13. There is $h \in \omega $ such that $\mathfrak F_{3.h'} = \mathfrak F_{3.h}$ for all $h' \geq h$ .

Proof. As in the proof of Lemma 5.15, we observe that in stage k of the construction, all $R_{3.h}$ -chains are bounded by k. Since, by Lemma 6.12, the $R_{3.h}$ -depth of $\mathfrak F_{3.h}$ is bounded by $2^{n}\cdot m +1$ , we have $\mathfrak F_{3.h'} = \mathfrak F_{2^{n}\cdot m +1}$ for all $h' \geq 2^{n}\cdot m +1$ .⊣

Set $\mathfrak {F}_3=(W_3,R_3,E_3)$ where

$$ \begin{align*} W_3=W_{3.h},\quad R_3=R_{3.h}, \quad E_3=E_{3.h}, \end{align*} $$

and h is as in Lemma 6.13. As an immediate consequence of Lemma 6.8, we obtain:

Lemma 6.14. $\mathfrak {F}_{3}=(W_{3},R_{3},E_{3})$ is a finite $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ -frame.

Finally, we verify that our frame validates precisely the formulas we want it to validate. Define a valuation $\nu _{3}$ on $W_{3}$ by $\nu _{3}(p)=\{t\in W_{3} \mid \widehat {t}\in \nu _{2}(p)\}$ for $p\in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ and $\nu _{3}(q)=\varnothing $ for variables q not occurring in $\varphi $ .

Lemma 6.15 (Truth Lemma)

For all $x\in W_{3}$ and $\psi \in \mathsf {Sub}(\varphi )$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathfrak{F}_{2},\widehat{x})\vDash_{2} \psi \Leftrightarrow (\mathfrak{F}_{3},x)\vDash_{3}\psi. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The proof is by induction on the complexity of $\psi $ and again we only consider the cases where $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ or $\psi =\square \psi _{1}$ .

Suppose $\psi =\forall \psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\forall \psi _{1}$ , then $\forall \psi _{1}\in \Sigma ^{\forall }(x)$ , so at some point in the construction of $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ we add s to $W_{3}$ and $(x,s)$ to $E_{3}$ where $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $s\not \vDash _{3}\psi _{1}$ , hence $x\not \vDash _{3}\forall \psi _{1}$ . Conversely, if $x\not \vDash _{3}\forall \psi _{1}$ , then there is $w\in W_{3}$ with $xE_{3}w$ and $w\not \vDash _{3}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $\widehat {w}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ , and by Lemma 6.9(1), $xE_{3}w$ implies $\widehat {x}E_{2}\widehat {w}$ , so $\widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\forall \psi _{1}$ .

Suppose $\psi =\square \psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \psi _{1}$ , then either $\widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ or $\widehat {x}\ \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ , then by the inductive hypothesis we have $x\not \vDash _{3}\psi _{1}$ , hence $x\not \vDash _{3}\square \psi _{1}$ . If $\ \widehat {x}\ \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ , then $\square \psi _{1}\in \Sigma ^{\square }(x)$ , so at some point in the construction of $\mathfrak {F}_{3}$ we add s to $W_{3}$ and $(x,s)$ to $R_{3}$ where $\widehat {s}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $s\not \vDash _{3}\psi _{1}$ , hence $x\not \vDash _{3}\square \psi _{1}$ . Conversely, if $x\not \vDash _{3}\square \psi _{1}$ , then there is $w\in W_{3}$ with $xR_{3}w$ and $w\not \vDash _{3}\psi _{1}$ . By the inductive hypothesis, $\widehat {w}\ \not \vDash _{2}\psi _{1}$ , and by Lemma 6.9(5), $xR_{3}w$ implies $\widehat {x}R_{2}\widehat {w}$ , so $\widehat {x}\ \not \vDash _{2}\square \psi _{1}$ .⊣

We thus arrive at our desired result:

Theorem 6.16. $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ has the finite model property.

As an immediate corollary to Theorem 6.16, we have:

Corollary 6.17. $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ is decidable.

Remark 6.18. Another consequence of Theorem 6.16 is that $\mathsf {M^{+}Grz}$ is the monadic fragment of the predicate modal logic obtained by adding to $\mathsf {QGrz}$ the Gödel translation of Casari’s formula $\mathsf {Cas}$ (cf. Remark 5.19).

Footnotes

1 $\square $ and $\lozenge $ are also frequently used in place of $\forall $ and $\exists $ .

2 $\forall p\to p$ , $\forall p\to \forall \forall p$ , and $\forall (p\wedge q)\leftrightarrow (\forall p\wedge \forall q)$ .

3 $p\to \exists p$ , $\exists \exists p\to \exists p$ , $\exists (p\vee q)\leftrightarrow (\exists p\vee \exists q)$ , and $\exists (\exists p\wedge q)\leftrightarrow (\exists p\wedge \exists q)$ .

4 $\forall a\le a$ , $\forall a\le \forall \forall a$ , $\forall (a\wedge b)=\forall a\wedge \forall b$ , and $\forall 1=1$ .

5 $a\le \exists a$ , $\exists \exists a\le \exists a$ , $\exists (a\vee b)=\exists a\vee \exists b$ , $\exists 0=0$ , and $\exists (\exists a\wedge b)=\exists a\wedge \exists b$ .

6 A nonempty partially ordered set.

7 Recall that $U\subseteq W$ is an R-upset if $u\in U$ and $uRv$ imply $v\in U$ .

8 A topological space is zero-dimensional if clopen (closed and open) sets form a basis for the topology.

9 $\square (p\to q)\to (\square p\to \square q)$ .

10 $\forall p\to p$ , $\forall p\to \forall \forall p$ , $\neg \forall p\to \forall \neg \forall p$ , and $\forall (p\to q)\to (\forall p\to \forall q)$ .

11 B is a boolean algebra and $\square :B\to B$ satisfies $\square 1=1$ and $\square (a\wedge b)=\square a\wedge \square b$ .

12 $(B,\forall )$ is a modal algebra satisfying $\forall a\le a$ , $\forall a\le \forall \forall a$ , and $\neg \forall a\le \forall \neg \forall a$ .

13 W is nonempty and R is a binary relation on W.

References

Abashidze, M. A., Some properties of Magari algebras , Studies in Logic and Semantics, Metsniereba, Tbilisi, 1981, pp. 111127 (Russian).Google Scholar
Artemov, S. N. and Beklemishev, L. D., Provability logic , Handbook of Philosophical Logic, vol. 13, second ed. (D. Gabbay and F. Guenthner, editors), Springer, Dordrecht, 2004, pp. 189360.Google Scholar
Bezhanishvili, G., Varieties of monadic Heyting algebras. I . Studia Logica, vol. 61 (1998), no. 3, pp. 367402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezhanishvili, G., Varieties of monadic Heyting algebras. II. Duality theory , Studia Logica, vol. 62 (1999), no. 1, pp. 2148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezhanishvili, G., Varieties of monadic Heyting algebras. III . Studia Logica, vol. 64 (2000), no. 2, pp. 215256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezhanishvili, G. and Carai, L., Temporal interpretation of monadic intuitionistic quantifiers . Review of Symbolic Logic, 2021, doi:10.1017/S1755020321000496.Google Scholar
Boolos, G., On systems of modal logic with provability interpretations . Theoria, vol. 46 (1980), no. 1, pp. 718.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boolos, G., The Logic of Provability, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993.Google Scholar
Brantley, K., Monadic Intuitionistic and Modal Logics Admitting Provability Interpretations, ProQuest LLC, Ann Arbor, 2019, Ph.D. thesis, New Mexico State University.Google Scholar
Bull, R. A., A modal extension of intuitionist logic . Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, vol. 6 (1965), pp. 142146.Google Scholar
Bull, R. A., $\textrm{MIPC}$ as the formalisation of an intuitionist concept of modality , this Journal, vol. 31 (1966), pp. 609616.Google Scholar
Chagrov, A. and Zakharyaschev, M., Modal Logic, Oxford Logic Guides, vol. 35, The Clarendon Press; Oxford University Press; Oxford Science Publications, New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Topological Kripke models . Soviet Mathematics Doklady, vol. 15 (1974), pp. 147151.Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., On modal companions of superintuitionistic logics, VII Soviet Symposium on Logic , 1976, (Russian).Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., On the variety of Grzegorczyk algebras , Studies in Nonclassical Logics and Set Theory , Nauka, Moscow, 1979, pp. 257287 (Russian).Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Heyting Algebras I: Duality Theory, Metsniereba, Tbilisi, 1985 (Russian).Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Provability logic with quantifier modalities , Intensional Logics and the Logical Structure of Theories (Telavi, 1985), Metsniereba, Tbilisi, 1988, pp. 49 (Russian).Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Quantification in intuitionistic logic with provability smack . Bulletin of the Section of Logic, vol. 27 (1998), pp. 2628.Google Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Intuitionistic logic and modality via topology . Annals of Pure and Applied Logic, vol. 127, 2004, pp. 155170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Esakia, L. L., Heyting Algebras: Duality Theory (G. Bezhanishvili and W.H. Holliday, editors), Trends in Logic—Studia Logica Library, vol. 50, Springer, Cham, 2019, Translated from the 1985 Russian edition by A. Evseev.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fine, K., Logics containing $K4$ . I , this Journal, vol. 39 (1974), pp. 3142.Google Scholar
Fischer-Servi, G., On modal logic with an intuitionistic base . Studia Logica, vol. 36 (1977), no. 3, pp. 141149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischer-Servi, G., The finite model property for $\textsf{\textit{MIPQ}}$ and some consequences . Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, vol. 19 (1978), no. 4, pp. 687692.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischer-Servi, G., Semantics for a class of intuitionistic modal calculi . Bulletin of the Section of Logic, vol. 7 (1978), no. 1, pp. 2630.Google Scholar
Gabbay, D. M., Kurucz, A., Wolter, F., and Zakharyaschev, M., Many-Dimensional Modal Logics: Theory and Applications , Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics, vol. 148, North-Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam, 2003.Google Scholar
Gabbay, D. M., Shehtman, V. B., and Skvortsov, D. P., Quantification in Nonclassical Logic, vol. 1 , Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics, vol. 153, Elsevier B. V., Amsterdam, 2009.Google Scholar
Gödel, K., Eine Interpretation des intuitionistischen Aussagenkalküls . Ergebnisse eines mathematischen Kolloquiums , vol. 4 (1933), pp. 3940, English translation in: Feferman, S. et al., editors, Kurt Gödel Collected Works, Vol. 1, pages 301–303. Oxford University Press, Oxford, Clarendon Press, New York, 1986.Google Scholar
Goldblatt, R., Arithmetical necessity, provability and intuitionistic logic . Theoria, vol. 44 (1978), no. 1, pp. 3846.Google Scholar
Grefe, C., Fischer Servi’s intuitionistic modal logic has the finite model property , Advances in Modal Logic, vol. 1 (Berlin, 1996), CSLI Lecture Notes, vol. 87, CSLI Publications, Stanford, 1998, pp. 8598.Google Scholar
Japaridze, G. K., Arithmetical completeness of provability logic with quantifier modalities . Soobshcheniya Akademii Nauk Gruzinskoĭ SSR , vol. 132 (1988), no. 2, pp. 265268 (Russian).Google Scholar
Japaridze, G. K., Decidable and enumerable predicate logics of provability . Studia Logica, vol. 49 (1990), no. 1, pp. 721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuznetsov, A. V. and Muravitsky, A. Yu., Provability as modality , Current Problems of Logic and Methodology of Science, Naukova Dumka, Kiev, (1980), pp. 193230 (Russian).Google Scholar
McKinsey, J. C. C. and Tarski, A., Some theorems about the sentential calculi of Lewis and Heyting , this Journal, vol. 13 (1948), pp. 115.Google Scholar
Montagna, F., The predicate modal logic of provability . Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, vol. 25 (1984), no. 2, pp. 179189.Google Scholar
Monteiro, A. and Varsavsky, O., Algebras de Heyting monàdicas, Actas de las X jornadas , Unión Matemática Argentina, Instituto de Matemáticas, Universidad Nacional del Sur, Bahiá Blanca, 1957, pp. 5262.Google Scholar
Ono, H., On some intuitionistic modal logics . Kyoto University, vol. 13 (1977/78), no. 3, pp. 687722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ono, H. and Suzuki, N.Y., Relations between intuitionistic modal logics and intermediate predicate logics . Reports on Mathematical Logic, vol. 22 (1988), pp. 6587.Google Scholar
Prior, A. N., Time and Modality, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1957.Google Scholar
Rasiowa, H. and Sikorski, R., The Mathematics of Metamathematics, Monografie Matematyczne, vol. 41, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, Warsaw, 1963.Google Scholar
Solovay, R. M., Provability interpretations of modal logic . Israel Journal of Mathematics , vol. 25 (1976), nos. 3–4, pp. 287304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar