Tomáš Jakl ; Dan Marsden ; Nihil Shah - A categorical account of composition methods in logic (extended version)

lmcs:13623 - Logical Methods in Computer Science, October 16, 2025, Volume 21, Issue 4 - https://doi.org/10.46298/lmcs-21(4:10)2025
A categorical account of composition methods in logic (extended version)Article

Authors: Tomáš Jakl ; Dan Marsden ; Nihil Shah

    We present a categorical theory of the composition methods in finite model theory -- a key technique enabling modular reasoning about complex structures by building them out of simpler components. The crucial results required by the composition methods are Feferman--Vaught--Mostowski (FVM) type theorems, which characterize how logical equivalence behaves under composition and transformation of models.

    Our results are developed by extending the recently introduced game comonad semantics for model comparison games. This level of abstraction allow us to give conditions yielding FVM type results in a uniform way. Our theorems are parametric in the classes of models, logics and operations involved. Furthermore, they naturally account for the existential and positive existential fragments, and extensions with counting quantifiers of these logics. We also reveal surprising connections between FVM type theorems, and classical concepts in the theory of monads.

    We illustrate our methods by recovering many classical theorems of practical interest, including a refinement of a previous result by Dawar, Severini, and Zapata concerning the 3-variable counting logic and cospectrality. To highlight the importance of our techniques being parametric in the logic of interest, we prove a family of FVM theorems for products of structures, uniformly in the logic in question, which cannot be done using specific game arguments.

    This is an extended version of the LiCS 2023 conference paper of the same name.

    arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2304.10196


    Volume: Volume 21, Issue 4
    Published on: October 16, 2025
    Accepted on: July 24, 2025
    Submitted on: May 20, 2024
    Keywords: Logic in Computer Science, Category Theory

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