Intermediate · Fundamentals
Quantifier
Visual diagram · (in preparation) · Math · (in preparation) · Worked example · 3 difficulty levels.
TL;DR. A logical symbol indicating the quantity of elements in a set that satisfy a condition (e.g., 'for all', 'there exists').
Technical Definition
A logical symbol indicating the quantity of elements in a set that satisfy a condition (e.g., 'for all', 'there exists').
How it works
In logic, quantifiers are essential symbols used to specify how many elements in a domain satisfy a certain property or open formula. The most common quantifiers are the universal quantifier ('for all', typically denoted by ∀) and the existential quantifier ('there exists', typically denoted by ∃). They are fundamental to mathematical logic and predicate calculus.
Related Concepts
- Predicate logic — A formal system that uses quantified variables and predicates to express logical propositions about objects and their properties.
- Propositional calculus — A branch of logic dealing with true/false propositions and how they connect, without focusing on objects or quantifiers.