Suppose that L(x,y) means that x loves y. I am to write symbolically, "For every person that loves someone, there exists a unique person that loves them" I feel like there are a hundred different ways to answer this question! The closest I can get is AxEyL(x,y) E!cL(c,x) I feel as if there should be an amplification arrow in between the two though..
2026-03-29 17:23:17.1774804997
Discrete Math Nested Quantifier
143 Views Asked by Bumbble Comm https://math.techqa.club/user/bumbble-comm/detail At
1
There are 1 best solutions below
Related Questions in DISCRETE-MATHEMATICS
- What is (mathematically) minimal computer architecture to run any software
- What's $P(A_1\cap A_2\cap A_3\cap A_4) $?
- The function $f(x)=$ ${b^mx^m}\over(1-bx)^{m+1}$ is a generating function of the sequence $\{a_n\}$. Find the coefficient of $x^n$
- Given is $2$ dimensional random variable $(X,Y)$ with table. Determine the correlation between $X$ and $Y$
- Given a function, prove that it's injective
- Surjective function proof
- How to find image of a function
- Find the truth value of... empty set?
- Solving discrete recursion equations with min in the equation
- Determine the marginal distributions of $(T_1, T_2)$
Related Questions in QUANTIFIERS
- Show formula which does not have quantifier elimination in theory of infinite equivalence relations.
- Prove or disprove: $\exists x \forall y \,\,\varphi \models \forall y \exists x \,\ \varphi$
- Variables, Quantifiers, and Logic
- Express least and greatest fixed point using predicate and quantifiers
- Nested Quantifiers - Excluding Self
- Logical Equivalences Involving Quantifiers
- Translating Propositional Functions
- Valid Set builder notations for simple set.
- Explanation about quantifier sequence ∀x∃y and ∃y∀x
- Contrapositive of a quantified statement
Trending Questions
- Induction on the number of equations
- How to convince a math teacher of this simple and obvious fact?
- Find $E[XY|Y+Z=1 ]$
- Refuting the Anti-Cantor Cranks
- What are imaginary numbers?
- Determine the adjoint of $\tilde Q(x)$ for $\tilde Q(x)u:=(Qu)(x)$ where $Q:U→L^2(Ω,ℝ^d$ is a Hilbert-Schmidt operator and $U$ is a Hilbert space
- Why does this innovative method of subtraction from a third grader always work?
- How do we know that the number $1$ is not equal to the number $-1$?
- What are the Implications of having VΩ as a model for a theory?
- Defining a Galois Field based on primitive element versus polynomial?
- Can't find the relationship between two columns of numbers. Please Help
- Is computer science a branch of mathematics?
- Is there a bijection of $\mathbb{R}^n$ with itself such that the forward map is connected but the inverse is not?
- Identification of a quadrilateral as a trapezoid, rectangle, or square
- Generator of inertia group in function field extension
Popular # Hahtags
second-order-logic
numerical-methods
puzzle
logic
probability
number-theory
winding-number
real-analysis
integration
calculus
complex-analysis
sequences-and-series
proof-writing
set-theory
functions
homotopy-theory
elementary-number-theory
ordinary-differential-equations
circles
derivatives
game-theory
definite-integrals
elementary-set-theory
limits
multivariable-calculus
geometry
algebraic-number-theory
proof-verification
partial-derivative
algebra-precalculus
Popular Questions
- What is the integral of 1/x?
- How many squares actually ARE in this picture? Is this a trick question with no right answer?
- Is a matrix multiplied with its transpose something special?
- What is the difference between independent and mutually exclusive events?
- Visually stunning math concepts which are easy to explain
- taylor series of $\ln(1+x)$?
- How to tell if a set of vectors spans a space?
- Calculus question taking derivative to find horizontal tangent line
- How to determine if a function is one-to-one?
- Determine if vectors are linearly independent
- What does it mean to have a determinant equal to zero?
- Is this Batman equation for real?
- How to find perpendicular vector to another vector?
- How to find mean and median from histogram
- How many sides does a circle have?
First of all, I would use $z$ instead of $c$, since $c$ is typically used for a specific individual, and you want to use a variable. Also, this $z$ will need to love $y$ as well as $x$.
But that is not the biggest issue with your attempt.
The sentence you are trying to symbolize is what is called a 'donkey sentence', so named after the following sentence:
'every farmer who owns a donkey beats it'
If you try to symbolize this, your first attempt might well be something like:
$\forall x ((Farmer(x) \land \exists y (Donkey(y) \land Owns(x,y))) \to Beats(x,y))$
The problem, however, is that in the $Beats(x,y)$ part, the $y$ is free, so this isn't right.
Indeed, in order to make reference to the donkey owned by the farmer, it turns out we need to paraphrase this sentence to: 'for any farmer and any donkey owned by that farmer, the farmer beats the donkey.
The same is true for your sentence. Here, we are tempted to do something like:
$\forall x (\exists y Loves(x,y) \to \exists ! z (Loves(z,x) \land Loves(z,y)))$
And we have the exact same problem: $y$ is free in $Loves(z,y)$
So, we need to rephrase this sentence as:
'For any person and any person loved by that person, there is a unique person that loves those two people'
So that becomes:
$\forall x \forall y (Loves(x,y) \to \exists ! z (Loves(z,x) \land Loves(z,y)))$