English

Natural Term Logic

Logic 2026-05-26 v10

Abstract

In this paper we develop a formal system called Natural Term Logic (NTL). NTL aims to represent key aspects of the logical and grammatical mechanisms of natural language as well as grammatical transformations which preserve core logical meaning. NTL can be seen as a refinement of the ideas of Quine's paper `Variables Explained Away' and the technical concepts introduced by Bealer and Zalta. NTL is more fine-grained than Bealer's first-order intensional logic (BL): there is a many-to-one correspondence ν\nu between NTL terms and closed BL terms as well as a canonical map β\beta which assigns to each closed BL term a corresponding NTL term. The map ν\nu can be seen as assigning a core logical content of the NTL term. We define a series of reductions on NTL terms which intuitivelyy speaking capture meaning-preserving syntactic transformations ( transformations which preserved the basic logical meaning of a term) and our main result is that each NTL term TT reduces to a unique normal term NN. The reductions fall into the structural, predicative and pushing-in categories. Predicative reductions decompose NTL terms so that predication is only applied to a primitive term (such terms are called prenormal). A key ingredient in the proof is the fact that βνN=N\beta \nu N = N when NN is normal. This suggests that within NTL the normal form of a term expresses the core logical content of the term.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.01668,
  title  = {Natural Term Logic},
  author = {Clarence Protin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.01668},
  year   = {2026}
}