Opening Notes
Epistemological analysis entailed searching for an identifiable base to anchor my pillars of intellect, while my introduction seeked comfort in sophist relativism, structure has undeniably proved its primacy and indispensability. Logic insists upon systematic progression within its sets, sequences in its algorithm, and syllogistic schemata as the guiding architecture through which truth is deduced, error is unveiled, and rational thought is disciplined into precision. Science both descriptivist and prescriptivist in synergy concluded me with a truth, the approximation of absolute truth, but never absolute reach. An absolute truth exists, but it is out of reach, at least to the finite mind in empirical dependency. Mind lacked definition, then lacked structure, thus it gave birth to an impossible existence, or more precisely a simulation of it, to satisfy the scope of imperfection within absolute perfection, an infinite decimal, a fraction to a whole, to an integer.
Logic
Classical logic
Classical logic serves as the foundation of philosophical and mathematical reasoning, its structural system entails the use of different components to study its reasoning. The three main parts of a Logical system contain language, deductive system, and model-theoretic semantics. "Classical logic is defined as a set of principles and methods of inference or valid reasoning (Mortari, 2016, p. 435)."
language and semantics
To draw a comparison between the formal and natural, NL contains higher levels of syntactical ambiguity for its rich lexicology, while FL are low due to the symbols and abstract forms being precise and restricted to their meaning. Example «Chara is a star» here, context sensitivity and the multitude of meaning creates ambiguity, whether star means the celestial body, a principal performer of a film/play, or a conventional five pointed shape, it is unnecessary and ubiquitously hindering of the pragmatic flow of logic. Formal language proves superior for its radical, quintessential precision. Formal language in logic and mathematics uses specific notations to represent its structure. These notations define the syntax and semantics of the language. It is important to familiarize with the key notations used in formal languages:
- 1. Alphabet (Σ)
- A formal language consists of a finite set of symbols (letters, variables, operators, etc.).
- Example:
- Σ = {a, b, c, 0, 1, +, →, ∧, ∨} (Set of allowed symbols)
- Natural numbers: Σ = {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
- Logical symbols: Σ = {¬, ∧, ∨, →, ∀, ∃}
- ¬ (Negation) → "not"
- ∧ (Conjunction) → "and"
- ∨ (Disjunction) → "or"
- → (Implication) → "if...then"
- ↔ (Biconditional) → "if and only if"
- Example: P → Q (If P, then Q) ----- (P ∨ Q) → R (If P or Q, then R)
- ∀x (Universal Quantifier) → "For all x..."
- ∀x (P(x) → Q(x)) ("For all x, if P(x) then Q(x)")
- x (Existential Quantifier) → "There exists an x..."
- ∃x P(x) ("There exists an x such that P(x) is true")
Logical operators
Quantifiers (For Predicate Logic)
Deductive SYSTEMS
Modus Ponens (→ Elimination):
Modus Tollens:
Hypothetical Syllogism
Metalogic
Truth conditions
Inference and Derivability
Propositional Content
Metalogic
The Finite Limit of Formal Systems
The Continuum Hypothesis and Unprovability
Axiom
Modal Logic
Contact
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