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Symbol (Formal) Information

A symbol is an abstraction, tokens of which may be marks or a configuration of marks which form a particular pattern. Although the term "symbol" in common use refers at some times to the idea being symbolized, and at other times to the marks on a piece of paper or chalkboard which are being used to express that idea; in the formal languages studied in mathematics and logic, the term "symbol" refers to the idea, and the marks are considered to be a token instance of the symbol.

Symbols of a formal language need not be symbols of anything. For instance there are logical constants which do not refer to any idea, but rather serve as a form of punctuation in the language (e.g. parentheses). Symbols of a formal language must be capable of being specified without any reference to any interpretation of them.

A symbol or string of symbols may comprise a well-formed formula if it is consistent with the formation rules of the language.

In a formal system a symbol may be used as a token in formal operations. The set of formal symbols in a formal language is referred to as an alphabet (hence each symbol may be referred to as a "letter")[2][page needed]

A formal symbol as used in first-order logic may be a variable (member from an universe of discourse), a constant, a function (mapping to another symbol) or a predicate (mapping to T/F).

Formal symbols are usually thought of as purely syntactic structures, composed into larger structures using a formal grammar, though sometimes they may be associated with an interpretation or model (a formal semantics), that define it in terms of other formal symbols.

Symbols such as ∧ or ¬ or are not formal symbols, in that their semantics is fixed - they are logical constants.

Formal Symbols versus traditional symbols

Traditional symbols are signs that stand for or represent some thing else, e.g. a portrait of a person, the resistance symbol in a circuit diagram, a phrase like "the horse" that refers to an animal, etc..

Formal symbols on the other hand are purely syntactic entities with no necessary association. However, in formal semantics, one attempts to construct models or interpretations based on higher-order logics like lambda calculus that provide an interpretation for the symbol in terms of what sets variables may belong to (first-order semantics, e.g. Montague grammar), or in terms of possible worlds where a statement may be true (modal logic semantics, e.g. Kripke semantics. However, these interpretations are themselves defined in terms of other formal (and therefore syntactic) symbols, and are not grounded in entities outside the formal system; hence they can be challenged as a case of circular definition.

Can words be modeled as formal symbols?

The move to view units in natural language (e.g. English) as formal symbols was initiated by Noam Chomsky (it was this work that resulted in the Chomsky hierarchy in formal languages). The generative grammar model looked upon syntax as autonomous from semantics. Building on these models, the logician Richard Montague proposed that semantics could also be constructed on top of the formal structure:

There is in my opinion no important theoretical difference between natural languages and the artificial languages of logicians; indeed, I consider it possible to comprehend the syntax and semantics of both kinds of language within a single natural and mathematically precise theory. On this point I differ from a number of philosophers, but agree, I believe, with Chomsky and his associates." [3][page needed]

This is the philosophical premise underlying Montague grammar.

However, this attempt to equate linguistic symbols with formal symbols has been challenged widely, particularly in the tradition of cognitive linguistics, by philosophers like Stevan Harnad, and linguists like George Lakoff and Ronald Langacker.

References

  1. ^ Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Douglas Hofstadter
  2. ^ John Hopcroft, Rajeev Motwani and Jeffrey Ullman, Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation, 2000
  3. ^ Richard Montague, Universal Grammar, 1970
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