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  1. The Craig Interpolation Theorem in abstract model theory.Jouko Väänänen - 2008 - Synthese 164 (3):401-420.
    The Craig Interpolation Theorem is intimately connected with the emergence of abstract logic and continues to be the driving force of the field. I will argue in this paper that the interpolation property is an important litmus test in abstract model theory for identifying “natural,” robust extensions of first order logic. My argument is supported by the observation that logics which satisfy the interpolation property usually also satisfy a Lindström type maximality theorem. Admittedly, the range of such logics is small.
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  • Remarks in abstract model theory.Saharon Shelah - 1985 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 29 (3):255-288.
  • On the homogeneity property for certain quantifier logics.Heike Mildenberger - 1992 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 31 (6):445-455.
    The local homogeneity property is defined as in [Mak]. We show thatL ωω(Q1) and some related logics do not have the local homogeneity property, whereas cofinality logicL ωω(Q cfω) has the homogeneity property. Both proofs use forcing and absoluteness arguments.
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  • European Summer Meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic (Logic Colloquium'88), Padova, 1988.R. Ferro - 1990 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 55 (1):387-435.
  • Harmonious logic: Craig’s interpolation theorem and its descendants.Solomon Feferman - 2008 - Synthese 164 (3):341 - 357.
    Though deceptively simple and plausible on the face of it, Craig's interpolation theorem (published 50 years ago) has proved to be a central logical property that has been used to reveal a deep harmony between the syntax and semantics of first order logic. Craig's theorem was generalized soon after by Lyndon, with application to the characterization of first order properties preserved under homomorphism. After retracing the early history, this article is mainly devoted to a survey of subsequent generalizations and applications, (...)
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  • Harmonious logic: Craig’s interpolation theorem and its descendants.Solomon Feferman - 2008 - Synthese 164 (3):341-357.
    Though deceptively simple and plausible on the face of it, Craig's interpolation theorem has proved to be a central logical property that has been used to reveal a deep harmony between the syntax and semantics of first order logic. Craig's theorem was generalized soon after by Lyndon, with application to the characterization of first order properties preserved under homomorphism. After retracing the early history, this article is mainly devoted to a survey of subsequent generalizations and applications, especially of many-sorted interpolation (...)
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  • Definability properties and the congruence closure.Xavier Caicedo - 1990 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 30 (4):231-240.
    We introduce a natural class of quantifiersTh containing all monadic type quantifiers, all quantifiers for linear orders, quantifiers for isomorphism, Ramsey type quantifiers, and plenty more, showing that no sublogic ofL ωω (Th) or countably compact regular sublogic ofL ∞ω (Th), properly extendingL ωω , satisfies the uniform reduction property for quotients. As a consequence, none of these logics satisfies eitherΔ-interpolation or Beth's definability theorem when closed under relativizations. We also show the failure of both properties for any sublogic ofL (...)
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  • Two-variable logic has weak, but not strong, Beth definability.Hajnal Andréka & István Németi - 2021 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 86 (2):785-800.
    We prove that the two-variable fragment of first-order logic has the weak Beth definability property. This makes the two-variable fragment a natural logic separating the weak and the strong Beth properties since it does not have the strong Beth definability property.
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