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LOCAL FINITENESS IN VARIETIES OF MS4-ALGEBRAS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2024

GURAM BEZHANISHVILI
Affiliation:
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY LAS CRUCES, NM 88003 USA E-mail: guram@nmsu.edu
CHASE MEADORS*
Affiliation:
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO BOULDER BOULDER, CO 80309 USA
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Abstract

It is a classic result of Segerberg and Maksimova that a variety of $\mathsf {S4}$-algebras is locally finite iff it is of finite depth. Since the logic $\mathsf {MS4}$ (monadic $\mathsf {S4}$) axiomatizes the one-variable fragment of $\mathsf {QS4}$ (predicate $\mathsf {S4}$), it is natural to try to generalize the Segerberg–Maksimova theorem to this setting. We obtain several results in this direction. Our positive results include the identification of the largest semisimple variety of $\mathsf {MS4}$-algebras. We prove that the corresponding logic $\mathsf {MS4_S}$ has the finite model property. We show that both $\mathsf {S5}^2$ and $\mathsf {S4}_u$ are proper extensions of $\mathsf {MS4_S}$, and that a direct generalization of the Segerberg–Maksimova theorem holds for a family of varieties containing the variety of $\mathsf {S4}_u$-algebras. Our negative results include a translation of varieties of $\mathsf {S5}_2$-algebras into varieties of $\mathsf {MS4_S}$-algebras of depth 2, which preserves and reflects local finiteness. This, in particular, shows that the problem of characterizing locally finite varieties of $\mathsf {MS4}$-algebras (even of $\mathsf {MS4_S}$-algebras) is at least as hard as that of characterizing locally finite varieties of $\mathsf {S5}_2$-algebras—a problem that remains wide open.

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Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Association for Symbolic Logic
Figure 0

Figure 1 The dual algebra of $\mathfrak {F}$ belongs to $\mathbf {S4}_u$ but not to $\mathbf {S5}^2$, and the opposite holds for the dual algebra of $\mathfrak {G}$.

Figure 1

Figure 2 The lattice of subvarieties of $\mathbf {S4}$, dually isomorphic to the lattice of normal extensions of $\mathsf {S4}$. The locally finite varieties are precisely the ones below the dotted line.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Descriptive frame of Example 5.10.

Figure 3

Figure 4 Constructing an $\mathsf {MS4_S}[2]$-frame from an $\mathsf {S5}_2$-frame. In the $\mathsf {S5}_2$-frame on the left, $E_1$-clusters are horizontal lines while $E_2$-clusters are bold vertical lines. In the $\mathsf {MS4_S}[2]$-frame on the right, R-clusters are horizontal lines, proper R-arrows are drawn with arrowheads, and E-clusters are given by the shaded rectangles.

Figure 4

Figure 5 Lifting a correct partition of $\mathfrak {F}$ to one of $T(\mathfrak {F})$, as in Lemma 6.12: E-classes are depicted by dotted lines (as $E_2$-classes of $\mathfrak{F}$) with the $E_2$-class itself depicted as a solid dot above on the top rail. The correct partition $\widehat {K}$ is depicted by the shaded rectangles.

Figure 5

Figure 6 An $\mathsf {MS4_S}[3]$-frame $\mathfrak {F}$ in which the relativization to each layer is a locally finite $\mathsf {S5}_2$-algebra, but $\mathfrak {F}^*$ is not locally finite.