Abstract
In order to avoid the use of individual variables in predicate calculus, several authors proposed language whose expressions can be interpreted, in general, as denotations of predicates . The present author also proposed a language of this kind [5]. The absence of individual variables makes all these languages rather different from the traditional language of predicate calculus and from the usual language of mathematics. The translation procedures from the ordinary predicate languages into the predicate languages without individual variables and vice versa have a technical character. It is desirable to make possible carrying out such procedures by performing some transformations in a suitable new language which comprises both a sublanguage similar to the ordinary predicate languages and another one not using individual variables. We shall propose now a language of the desired kind. The expressions of this language could be interpreted, in general, as denoting predicates which depend on parameters on a given object domain – this predicate has one argument and depends on one parameter). The proposed language will have the modal features noted in [3] and [5]. It is worthy of mention that the language proposed at the end of [4] although containing expressions interpreted as predicates and expressions with parameters does not allow simultaneous availability of argument places and parameters