LOGIC

the systematic study of valid inference. A distinction is drawn between logical validity and truth. Validity merely refers to formal properties of the process of inference. Thus, a conclusion whose value is true may be drawn from an invalid argument, and one whose value is false, from a valid sequence. For example, the argument All professors are brilliant; Smith is a professor, therefore, Smith is brilliant is a valid inference, but the argument All professors are brilliant; Smith is brilliant; therefore, Smith is a professor is an invalid inference, even if Smith is a professor.

Aristotelian Logic

In Western thought, systematic logic is considered to have begun with Aristotle's collection of treatises, the Organon [tool]. Aristotle introduced the use of variables: While his contemporaries illustrated principles by the use of examples, Aristotle generalized, as in: All x are y; all y are z; therefore, all x are z. Aristotle posited three laws as basic to all valid thought: the law of identity, A is A; the law of contradiction, A cannot be both A and not A; and the law of the excluded middle, A must be either A or not A.

Aristotle believed that any logical argument could be reduced to a standard form, known as a syllogism. A syllogism is a sequence of three propositions: two premises and the conclusion. By varying the form of the proposition and the modifiers (such as all, no, and some), a few specific forms may be delimited. Although Aristotle was concerned with problems in modal logic and other minor branches, it is usually agreed that his major contribution in the field of logic was his elaboration of syllogistic logic; indeed, the Aristotelian statement of logic held sway in the Western world for 2,000 years. Nonetheless, various logicians did, during that time, take issue with parts of Aristotle's thought.

Post-Aristotelian Logic

One of Aristotle's tacit assumptions was that there is a correspondence linking the structures of reality, the mind, and language (and hence logic). This position came to be known in the Middle Ages as realism. The opposing school of thought, nominalism, is exemplified by William of Occam, a medieval logician, who maintained that the structure of language and logic corresponds only to the structure of the mind, not to that of reality. Since knowledge is a study of generalizations, while nature occurs in myriad single instances, the distinction between the world and our conception of it is stressed by the nominalists.

Inductive Reasoning

In the 19th cent. John Stuart Mill noticed the same dichotomy between man's generalizations and nature's instances, but moved toward a different conclusion. Mill held that the scientist or experimenter is not interested in moving from the general to the specific case, which characterizes deductive logic, but is concerned with inductive reasoning, moving from the specific to the general (see induction). For example, the statement The sun will rise tomorrow is not the result of a particular deductive process, but is based on a psychological calculation of general probability based on many specific past experiences. Mill's chief contribution to logic rests on his efforts to formulate rules of inductive logic. Although since the criticisms of David Hume there has been disagreement about the validity of induction, modern logicians have argued that inductive logic does not need justification any more than deductive logic does. The real problem is to establish rules of induction, just as Aristotle established rules of deduction.

Mathematics and Logic

With the development of symbolic logic by George Boole and Augustus De Morgan in the 19th cent., logic has been studied in more purely mathematical terms, and mathematical symbols have replaced ordinary language. Reference to external interpretations of the symbols (formulated in ordinary language) was also rejected by the formalist movement of the early 20th cent. Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead, in Principia Mathematica (3 vol., 1910–13), attempted to develop logical theory as the basis for mathematics. Pure formal logic attempts to prove that a logical system is dependent only on the perceptual recognition and valid manipulation of symbols and requires no interpretive reference to content.

Intuitionism, rejecting such formalism, holds that words and formulas have significance only as a reflection of activity in the mind. Thus a theorem has meaning only if it represents a mental construction of a mathematical or logical entity. Kurt Gödel, in the 1930s, brought forth his "incompleteness theorem," which demonstrates that an infinitude of propositions that are underivable from the axioms of a system nevertheless have the value of true within the system. Neither these Gödel Propositions, as they are called, nor their negations are provable. One implication for the modern logician is that Aristotle's law of the excluded middle (either A or not A) is neither so simple nor so self-evident as it once seemed.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Research Topics on: Logic

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A. J. Ayer British Philosophy Critical Thinking Deductive Logic
Deductive Reasoning Indian Philosophy Inductive Logic John Stuart Mill
Kurt Godel Logic Mathematical Logic (Symbolic Logic) Metamathematics
Michael Dummett Reasoning Stoicism W. V. Quine
 

books on: Logic  - 54404 results

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...On Purely Relevant Logics. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 27:180-194...Useful Four-Valued Logic. In J. Michael Dunn...of MuLtipLe-VaLued Logics, pages 8-37. Reidel...Belnap. Display Logic. Journal of PhiLosophicaL...
...1976 , Foundations of Mathematical Logic , Dover Edition, New York, Dover Publications...d De Morgan, Augustus, 1847 , Formal Logic: The Calculus of Inference, Necessary...The Philosophical Basis of Intuitionist Logic, in Truth and other Enigmas , London...
...J. N. 1906 , Studies and Exercises in Formal Logic London: Macmillan . KNUUTTILA, S. 1993 , Modalities...A. 1959 a , "A Completeness Theorem in Modal Logic", The Journal of Symbolic Logic , 24: 1-14. ----- 1959 b , "Semantical...
4 The Logic of Rules Our account of the logic of rules is stratified. The various layers consist of the logic of states , i.e. essentially classical logic of the usual sort , the logic of agents and action types or as we call them routines...
...issue concerns what classical predicate logic is. Suppose it is formulated as Quine...free logician challenges the conventional logic of predicates. So if constant singular...added to the vocabulary, the resulting logic could be free, and an extension of classical...
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The Logic of the Body in Bergsons Motor...The body would thus impose its logic on our thinking. But what is...these temporalities and their logics echo one another, then perhaps the implicit logic of mind, while leaping over the...
LOGIC, LANGUAGE, AND GRAMMAR IN EARLY CHINA. by WILLIAM G. BOLTZ In examining...Harbsmeier has shown in this volume of Science and Civilisation in China that "logic is logic" and that, like mathematics, physics, and chemistry, for example...
Piagets Logic of Meanings: Still Relevant Today. by...James Wavering In his last book, Toward a Logic of Meanings (Piaget Garcia, 1991), Jean...categorized into a form of propositional logic, a logic of meanings. The intent of this...
Heidegger, Martin. Logic: The Question of Truth. by Miles Groth HEIDEGGER, Martin. Logic: The Question of Truth. Studies in Continental...All philosophy majors are required to take a logic course which is supposed to teach them how to...
...SCHELLINGS CRITIQUE OF HEGELS SCIENCE OF LOGIC by STEPHEN HOULGATE IN HIS PROVOCATIVE...misrepresent Hegels claims in the Science of Logic. This aim is a relatively modest one...Hegel thus does not keep his Science of Logic within the limits of negative philosophy...
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...2003). Description logics are an extension...relations. Description logic languages differ...made description logic systems widely accessible...uses of description logics in the context of...expressed in description logics and could support...through description logic reasoners. The TINO...
Fuzzy Logic: the New Paradigm for Decision Making by...dealing with imprecision (called Fuzzy Logic) has been developed. So far its principal...article is to describe generally what fuzzy logic is, to show a simple example of its application...
Deep Transfer: a Markov Logic Approach by Jesse Davis , Pedro Domingos...We argue that second-order Markov logic is ideally suited for this purpose and...the source domain in the form of Markov logic formulas with predicate variables and...
The Logic of Campaigns of Offensive Air-sea-land...doctrines. It is important to share a tested logic within the Department of Defense ahead of...methods. It is important not to carry Wardens logic too far. First, what Warden says may be...
Emortgage Logic Releases Collateral Assessment Report eMortgage Logic LLC, Fort Worth, Texas, a...preferred brokers, eMortgage Logics report addresses all pertinent...influences, according to eMortgage Logic. The guidelines recommend that...
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...New York. "Gene Logic is a very opportunistic...also strengthens Gene Logics position in marketing...We believe Gene Logic will achieve, in...J. Brennan, Gene Logics president and chief executive. Gene Logic is expected to reach...
...the ways in which Gene Logics core competencies...vice president with Gene Logic, in a press release...still unsure how Gene Logic planned to reduce its...Mr. Baker said Gene Logics recent purchase of TherImmune...could give the Gene Logic a boost. Mr. Baker...
Gene Logics chief executive...he runs Gene Logic Inc., a company...conference room at Gene Logics newest facility...in 1996, Gene Logic has signed up 16...databases like Gene Logics, it would be too...turning to Gene Logic for the information...
Spectra Logic Tapping ROK Data Storage Mart. A leading...Thompson, chief executive officer of Spectra Logic Corp., told The Korea Times. ``As you...area where our company prospers. Spectra Logic is a leading manufacturer of high-performance...
...in a tissue. By 2003, Gene Logic hopes it will contain about...breathing and living thing." Gene Logics original service, a custom...particular disease. For a fee, Gene Logic studies those samples and delivers...pharmaceutical companies. As far as Gene Logics management, analysts say that...
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encyclopedia articles on: Logic  - 114 results

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LOGIC the systematic study of valid inference. A distinction is drawn...invalid inference, even if Smith is a professor. Aristotelian Logic In Western thought, systematic logic is considered to have begun with Aristotles collection of treatises...
SYMBOLIC LOGIC or mathematical logic, formalized system of deductive logic, employing abstract symbols for the various aspects of natural language. Symbolic logic draws on the concepts and techniques of mathematics, notably set theory, and...
FUZZY LOGIC a multivalued (as opposed to binary) logic developed to deal with imprecise or vague data. Classical logic holds that everything can be expressed in binary terms: 0 or 1, black or white, yes or no; in terms of Boolean algebra...
LOGIC CIRCUIT electric circuit whose output depends...can be expressed as a function in symbolic logic ; it has one or more binary inputs (capable...or "off") and a single binary output. Logic circuits that perform particular functions...
INDUCTION , in logic in logic , a form of argument in which the premises give grounds for the conclusion...Novum Organum (1620) elucidated the first formal theory of inductive logic, which he proposed as a logic of scientific discovery, as opposed...
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