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Logics, Volume 1, Issue 1 (March 2023) – 4 articles

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44 pages, 704 KiB  
Article
A Fundamental Non-Classical Logic
by Wesley H. Holliday
Logics 2023, 1(1), 36-79; https://doi.org/10.3390/logics1010004 - 21 Mar 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 4867
Abstract
We give a proof-theoretic as well as a semantic characterization of a logic in the signature with conjunction, disjunction, negation, and the universal and existential quantifiers that we suggest has a certain fundamental status. We present a Fitch-style natural deduction system for the [...] Read more.
We give a proof-theoretic as well as a semantic characterization of a logic in the signature with conjunction, disjunction, negation, and the universal and existential quantifiers that we suggest has a certain fundamental status. We present a Fitch-style natural deduction system for the logic that contains only the introduction and elimination rules for the logical constants. From this starting point, if one adds the rule that Fitch called Reiteration, one obtains a proof system for intuitionistic logic in the given signature; if instead of adding Reiteration, one adds the rule of Reductio ad Absurdum, one obtains a proof system for orthologic; by adding both Reiteration and Reductio, one obtains a proof system for classical logic. Arguably neither Reiteration nor Reductio is as intimately related to the meaning of the connectives as the introduction and elimination rules are, so the base logic we identify serves as a more fundamental starting point and common ground between proponents of intuitionistic logic, orthologic, and classical logic. The algebraic semantics for the logic we motivate proof-theoretically is based on bounded lattices equipped with what has been called a weak pseudocomplementation. We show that such lattice expansions are representable using a set together with a reflexive binary relation satisfying a simple first-order condition, which yields an elegant relational semantics for the logic. This builds on our previous study of representations of lattices with negations, which we extend and specialize for several types of negation in addition to weak pseudocomplementation. Finally, we discuss ways of extending these representations to lattices with a conditional or implication operation. Full article
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32 pages, 522 KiB  
Article
Logics for Strategic Reasoning of Socially Interacting Rational Agents: An Overview and Perspectives
by Valentin Goranko
Logics 2023, 1(1), 4-35; https://doi.org/10.3390/logics1010003 - 06 Feb 2023
Viewed by 1674
Abstract
This paper is an overview of some recent and ongoing developments of formal logical systems designed for reasoning about systems of rational agents who act in pursuit of their individual and collective goals, explicitly specified in the language as arguments of the strategic [...] Read more.
This paper is an overview of some recent and ongoing developments of formal logical systems designed for reasoning about systems of rational agents who act in pursuit of their individual and collective goals, explicitly specified in the language as arguments of the strategic operators, in a socially interactive context of collective objectives and attitudes which guide and constrain the agents’ behavior. Full article
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2 pages, 299 KiB  
Editorial
From the Venerable History of Logic to the Flourishing Future of Logics
by Valentin Goranko
Logics 2023, 1(1), 2-3; https://doi.org/10.3390/logics1010002 - 21 Apr 2022
Viewed by 5606
Abstract
Reasoning is one of the most important and distinguished human activities [...] Full article
1 pages, 333 KiB  
Editorial
Publisher’s Note: Logics—A New Open Access Journal
by Constanze Schelhorn
Logics 2023, 1(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/logics1010001 - 16 Dec 2021
Viewed by 2001
Abstract
Logic (from ancient Greek “λογικὴ τέχνη (logiké téchnē)”—“thinking art”, “procedure”) is a multidisciplinary field of research studying the formal principles of reasoning [...] Full article
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