Structural connections between a forcing class and its modal logic
Joel David Hamkins, George Leibman, Benedikt L\"owe

TL;DR
This paper explores the modal logic principles valid for various classes of forcing in set theory, revealing structural connections that determine their logical validity and extending the understanding of forcing axioms.
Contribution
It establishes precise modal logic characterizations for different forcing classes, linking structural properties of forcing notions to modal logic validity.
Findings
Collapse and Cohen forcing correspond to S4.3 logic.
Countably closed and CH-preserving forcing correspond to S4.2 logic.
Certain forcing classes are contained within S4.3 or S4.tBA.
Abstract
The modal logic of forcing arises when one considers a model of set theory in the context of all its forcing extensions, interpreting necessity as "in all forcing extensions" and possibility as "in some forcing extension". In this modal language one may easily express sweeping general forcing principles, such as the assertion that every possibly necessary statement is necessarily possible, which is valid for forcing, or the assertion that every possibly necessary statement is true, which is the maximality principle, a forcing axiom independent of but equiconsistent with ZFC (Stavi-V\"a\"an\"anen, Hamkins). Every definable forcing class similarly gives rise to the corresponding forcing modalities, for which one considers extensions only by forcing notions in that class. In previous work, we proved that if ZFC is consistent, then the ZFC-provably valid principles of the class of all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLogic, Reasoning, and Knowledge · Logic, programming, and type systems · Advanced Algebra and Logic
