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Semantics for normal modal logic: Kripke models

Normal modal logics can be given a nice semantics by means of Kripke models, also known as possible worlds semantics.


\begin{definition}[Semantics for normal modal logics]
\par A Kripke model is a s...
...cal{C}}\alpha$,
if it is valid in all models of that class.
\par\end{definition}

Probably the most important reason for the popularity of possible-worlds semantics is that common modal axioms correspond exactly to certain algebraic properties of Kripke models in the following sense: an axiom is valid in a model $M$ if and only if the alternativeness relation of $M$ satisfies some algebraic condition. (In fact, the correspondence holds on a higher abstraction level, the level of frames, consult [vB84] for details.) In particular:

The common normal modal logics can be characterized by appropriate classes of Kripke models. In the following theorem, a Kripke model is said to be reflexive iff its accessibility relation is reflexive, and so on.


\begin{theorem}
\par\begin{enumerate}
\par\item The minimal normal system \textb...
...f
serial, transitive, and Euclidean models.
\par\end{enumerate}\par\end{theorem}

The common normal propositional modal logics are conservative extensions of classical logic: if a formula $\alpha$ does not contain any occurrence of the modal operator then it is provable in a system mentioned in the previous theorem if and only if it is provable in the propositional calculus.


next up previous contents
Next: Montague-Scott semantics Up: Modal logic Previous: Sytax of modal logic   Contents
2001-04-05