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Logical consequence

Logical consequence (also entailment) is a fundamental concept in logic which describes the relationship between statements that hold true when one statement logically follows from one or more statements. A valid logical argument is one in which the conclusion is entailed by the premises, because the conclusion is the consequence of the premises. The philosophical analysis of logical consequence involves the questions: In what sense does a conclusion follow from its premises? and What does it mean for a conclusion to be a consequence of premises?[1] All of philosophical logic is meant to provide accounts of the nature of logical consequence and the nature of logical truth.[2]

Logical consequence is necessary and formal, by way of examples that explain with formal proof and models of interpretation.[1] A sentence is said to be a logical consequence of a set of sentences, for a given language, if and only if, using only logic (i.e., without regard to any personal interpretations of the sentences) the sentence must be true if every sentence in the set is true.[3]

Logicians make precise accounts of logical consequence regarding a given language , either by constructing a deductive system for or by formal intended semantics for language . The Polish logician Alfred Tarski identified three features of an adequate characterization of entailment: (1) The logical consequence relation relies on the logical form of the sentences: (2) The relation is a priori, i.e., it can be determined with or without regard to empirical evidence (sense experience); and (3) The logical consequence relation has a modal component.[3]

Formal accounts

The most widely prevailing view on how best to account for logical consequence is to appeal to formality. This is to say that whether statements follow from one another logically depends on the structure or logical form of the statements without regard to the contents of that form.

Syntactic accounts of logical consequence rely on schemes using inference rules. For instance, we can express the logical form of a valid argument as:

All X are Y
All Y are Z
Therefore, all X are Z.

This argument is formally valid, because every instance of arguments constructed using this scheme is valid.

This is in contrast to an argument like "Fred is Mike's brother's son. Therefore Fred is Mike's nephew." Since this argument depends on the meanings of the words "brother", "son", and "nephew", the statement "Fred is Mike's nephew" is a so-called material consequence of "Fred is Mike's brother's son", not a formal consequence. A formal consequence must be true in all cases, however this is an incomplete definition of formal consequence, since even the argument "P is Q's brother's son, therefore P is Q's nephew" is valid in all cases, but is not a formal argument.[1]

A priori property of logical consequence

If it is known that   follows logically from  , then no information about the possible interpretations of   or   will affect that knowledge. Our knowledge that   is a logical consequence of   cannot be influenced by empirical knowledge.[1] Deductively valid arguments can be known to be so without recourse to experience, so they must be knowable a priori.[1] However, formality alone does not guarantee that logical consequence is not influenced by empirical knowledge. So the a priori property of logical consequence is considered to be independent of formality.[1]

Proofs and models

The two prevailing techniques for providing accounts of logical consequence involve expressing the concept in terms of proofs and via models. The study of the syntactic consequence (of a logic) is called (its) proof theory whereas the study of (its) semantic consequence is called (its) model theory.[4]

Syntactic consequence

A formula   is a syntactic consequence[5][6][7][8][9] within some formal system   of a set   of formulas if there is a formal proof in   of   from the set  . This is denoted  . The turnstile symbol   was originally introduced by Frege in 1879, but its current use only dates back to Rosser and Kleene (1934--1935). [9]

Syntactic consequence does not depend on any interpretation of the formal system.[10]

Semantic consequence

A formula   is a semantic consequence within some formal system   of a set of statements   if and only if there is no model   in which all members of   are true and   is false.[11] This is denoted  . Or, in other words, the set of the interpretations that make all members of   true is a subset of the set of the interpretations that make   true.

Modal accounts

Modal accounts of logical consequence are variations on the following basic idea:

      is true if and only if it is necessary that if all of the elements of   are true, then   is true.

Alternatively (and, most would say, equivalently):

      is true if and only if it is impossible for all of the elements of   to be true and   false.

Such accounts are called "modal" because they appeal to the modal notions of logical necessity and logical possibility. 'It is necessary that' is often expressed as a universal quantifier over possible worlds, so that the accounts above translate as:

      is true if and only if there is no possible world at which all of the elements of   are true and   is false (untrue).

Consider the modal account in terms of the argument given as an example above:

All frogs are green.
Kermit is a frog.
Therefore, Kermit is green.

The conclusion is a logical consequence of the premises because we can't imagine a possible world where (a) all frogs are green; (b) Kermit is a frog; and (c) Kermit is not green.

Modal-formal accounts

Modal-formal accounts of logical consequence combine the modal and formal accounts above, yielding variations on the following basic idea:

      if and only if it is impossible for an argument with the same logical form as  /  to have true premises and a false conclusion.

Warrant-based accounts

The accounts considered above are all "truth-preservational", in that they all assume that the characteristic feature of a good inference is that it never allows one to move from true premises to an untrue conclusion. As an alternative, some have proposed "warrant-preservational" accounts, according to which the characteristic feature of a good inference is that it never allows one to move from justifiably assertible premises to a conclusion that is not justifiably assertible. This is (roughly) the account favored by intuitionists such as Michael Dummett.

Non-monotonic logical consequence

The accounts discussed above all yield monotonic consequence relations, i.e. ones such that if   is a consequence of  , then   is a consequence of any superset of  . It is also possible to specify non-monotonic consequence relations to capture the idea that, e.g., 'Tweety can fly' is a logical consequence of

{Birds can typically fly, Tweety is a bird}

but not of

{Birds can typically fly, Tweety is a bird, Tweety is a penguin}.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Beall, JC and Restall, Greg, Logical Consequence The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2009 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.).
  2. ^ Quine, Willard Van Orman, Philosophy of Logic.
  3. ^ a b McKeon, Matthew, Logical Consequence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  4. ^ Kosta Dosen (1996). "Logical consequence: a turn in style". In Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara; Kees Doets; Daniele Mundici; Johan van Benthem (eds.). Logic and Scientific Methods: Volume One of the Tenth International Congress of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, Florence, August 1995. Springer. p. 292. ISBN 978-0-7923-4383-7.
  5. ^ Dummett, Michael (1993) philosophy of language Harvard University Press, p.82ff
  6. ^ Lear, Jonathan (1986) and Logical Theory Cambridge University Press, 136p.
  7. ^ Creath, Richard, and Friedman, Michael (2007) Cambridge companion to Carnap Cambridge University Press, 371p.
  8. ^ FOLDOC: "syntactic consequence" 2013-04-03 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b S. C. Kleene, Introduction to Metamathematics (1952), Van Nostrand Publishing. p.88.
  10. ^ Hunter, Geoffrey, Metalogic: An Introduction to the Metatheory of Standard First-Order Logic, University of California Press, 1971, p. 75.
  11. ^ Etchemendy, John, Logical consequence, The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy

Resources

  • Anderson, A.R.; Belnap, N.D. Jr. (1975), Entailment, vol. 1, Princeton, NJ: Princeton.
  • Augusto, Luis M. (2017), Logical consequences. Theory and applications: An introduction. London: College Publications. Series: Mathematical logic and foundations.
  • Barwise, Jon; Etchemendy, John (2008), Language, Proof and Logic, Stanford: CSLI Publications.
  • Brown, Frank Markham (2003), Boolean Reasoning: The Logic of Boolean Equations 1st edition, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell, MA. 2nd edition, Dover Publications, Mineola, NY, 2003.
  • Davis, Martin, ed. (1965), The Undecidable, Basic Papers on Undecidable Propositions, Unsolvable Problems And Computable Functions, New York: Raven Press, ISBN 9780486432281. Papers include those by Gödel, Church, Rosser, Kleene, and Post.
  • Dummett, Michael (1991), The Logical Basis of Metaphysics, Harvard University Press, ISBN 9780674537866.
  • Edgington, Dorothy (2001), Conditionals, Blackwell in Lou Goble (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic.
  • Edgington, Dorothy (2006), "Indicative Conditionals", Conditionals, Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University in Edward N. Zalta (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Etchemendy, John (1990), The Concept of Logical Consequence, Harvard University Press.
  • Goble, Lou, ed. (2001), The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic, Blackwell.
  • Hanson, William H (1997), "The concept of logical consequence", The Philosophical Review, 106 (3): 365–409, doi:10.2307/2998398, JSTOR 2998398 365–409.
  • Hendricks, Vincent F. (2005), Thought 2 Talk: A Crash Course in Reflection and Expression, New York: Automatic Press / VIP, ISBN 978-87-991013-7-5
  • Planchette, P. A. (2001), Logical Consequence in Goble, Lou, ed., The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic. Blackwell.
  • Quine, W.V. (1982), Methods of Logic, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press (1st ed. 1950), (2nd ed. 1959), (3rd ed. 1972), (4th edition, 1982).
  • Shapiro, Stewart (2002), Necessity, meaning, and rationality: the notion of logical consequence in D. Jacquette, ed., A Companion to Philosophical Logic. Blackwell.
  • Tarski, Alfred (1936), On the concept of logical consequence Reprinted in Tarski, A., 1983. Logic, Semantics, Metamathematics, 2nd ed. Oxford University Press. Originally published in Polish and German.
  • Ryszard Wójcicki (1988). Theory of Logical Calculi: Basic Theory of Consequence Operations. Springer. ISBN 978-90-277-2785-5.
  • A paper on 'implication' from math.niu.edu, Implication 2014-10-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • A definition of 'implicant' AllWords

External links

logical, consequence, entailment, redirects, here, other, uses, entail, disambiguation, therefore, redirects, here, therefore, symbol, therefore, sign, logical, implication, redirects, here, binary, connective, material, conditional, redirects, here, symbol, d. Entailment redirects here For other uses see Entail disambiguation Therefore redirects here For the therefore symbol see Therefore sign Logical implication redirects here For the binary connective see Material conditional redirects here For the symbol see Double turnstile Logical consequence also entailment is a fundamental concept in logic which describes the relationship between statements that hold true when one statement logically follows from one or more statements A valid logical argument is one in which the conclusion is entailed by the premises because the conclusion is the consequence of the premises The philosophical analysis of logical consequence involves the questions In what sense does a conclusion follow from its premises and What does it mean for a conclusion to be a consequence of premises 1 All of philosophical logic is meant to provide accounts of the nature of logical consequence and the nature of logical truth 2 Logical consequence is necessary and formal by way of examples that explain with formal proof and models of interpretation 1 A sentence is said to be a logical consequence of a set of sentences for a given language if and only if using only logic i e without regard to any personal interpretations of the sentences the sentence must be true if every sentence in the set is true 3 Logicians make precise accounts of logical consequence regarding a given language L displaystyle mathcal L either by constructing a deductive system for L displaystyle mathcal L or by formal intended semantics for language L displaystyle mathcal L The Polish logician Alfred Tarski identified three features of an adequate characterization of entailment 1 The logical consequence relation relies on the logical form of the sentences 2 The relation is a priori i e it can be determined with or without regard to empirical evidence sense experience and 3 The logical consequence relation has a modal component 3 Contents 1 Formal accounts 2 A priori property of logical consequence 3 Proofs and models 3 1 Syntactic consequence 3 2 Semantic consequence 4 Modal accounts 4 1 Modal formal accounts 4 2 Warrant based accounts 4 3 Non monotonic logical consequence 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Resources 8 External linksFormal accounts EditThe most widely prevailing view on how best to account for logical consequence is to appeal to formality This is to say that whether statements follow from one another logically depends on the structure or logical form of the statements without regard to the contents of that form Syntactic accounts of logical consequence rely on schemes using inference rules For instance we can express the logical form of a valid argument as All X are Y All Y are Z Therefore all X are Z This argument is formally valid because every instance of arguments constructed using this scheme is valid This is in contrast to an argument like Fred is Mike s brother s son Therefore Fred is Mike s nephew Since this argument depends on the meanings of the words brother son and nephew the statement Fred is Mike s nephew is a so called material consequence of Fred is Mike s brother s son not a formal consequence A formal consequence must be true in all cases however this is an incomplete definition of formal consequence since even the argument P is Q s brother s son therefore P is Q s nephew is valid in all cases but is not a formal argument 1 A priori property of logical consequence EditIf it is known that Q displaystyle Q follows logically from P displaystyle P then no information about the possible interpretations of P displaystyle P or Q displaystyle Q will affect that knowledge Our knowledge that Q displaystyle Q is a logical consequence of P displaystyle P cannot be influenced by empirical knowledge 1 Deductively valid arguments can be known to be so without recourse to experience so they must be knowable a priori 1 However formality alone does not guarantee that logical consequence is not influenced by empirical knowledge So the a priori property of logical consequence is considered to be independent of formality 1 Proofs and models EditThe two prevailing techniques for providing accounts of logical consequence involve expressing the concept in terms of proofs and via models The study of the syntactic consequence of a logic is called its proof theory whereas the study of its semantic consequence is called its model theory 4 Syntactic consequence Edit See also and A formula A displaystyle A is a syntactic consequence 5 6 7 8 9 within some formal system F S displaystyle mathcal FS of a set G displaystyle Gamma of formulas if there is a formal proof in F S displaystyle mathcal FS of A displaystyle A from the set G displaystyle Gamma This is denoted G F S A displaystyle Gamma vdash mathcal FS A The turnstile symbol displaystyle vdash was originally introduced by Frege in 1879 but its current use only dates back to Rosser and Kleene 1934 1935 9 Syntactic consequence does not depend on any interpretation of the formal system 10 Semantic consequence Edit See also A formula A displaystyle A is a semantic consequence within some formal system F S displaystyle mathcal FS of a set of statements G displaystyle Gamma if and only if there is no model I displaystyle mathcal I in which all members of G displaystyle Gamma are true and A displaystyle A is false 11 This is denoted G F S A displaystyle Gamma models mathcal FS A Or in other words the set of the interpretations that make all members of G displaystyle Gamma true is a subset of the set of the interpretations that make A displaystyle A true Modal accounts EditModal accounts of logical consequence are variations on the following basic idea G displaystyle Gamma displaystyle vdash A displaystyle A is true if and only if it is necessary that if all of the elements of G displaystyle Gamma are true then A displaystyle A is true Alternatively and most would say equivalently G displaystyle Gamma displaystyle vdash A displaystyle A is true if and only if it is impossible for all of the elements of G displaystyle Gamma to be true and A displaystyle A false Such accounts are called modal because they appeal to the modal notions of logical necessity and logical possibility It is necessary that is often expressed as a universal quantifier over possible worlds so that the accounts above translate as G displaystyle Gamma displaystyle vdash A displaystyle A is true if and only if there is no possible world at which all of the elements of G displaystyle Gamma are true and A displaystyle A is false untrue Consider the modal account in terms of the argument given as an example above All frogs are green Kermit is a frog Therefore Kermit is green The conclusion is a logical consequence of the premises because we can t imagine a possible world where a all frogs are green b Kermit is a frog and c Kermit is not green Modal formal accounts Edit Modal formal accounts of logical consequence combine the modal and formal accounts above yielding variations on the following basic idea G displaystyle Gamma displaystyle vdash A displaystyle A if and only if it is impossible for an argument with the same logical form as G displaystyle Gamma A displaystyle A to have true premises and a false conclusion Warrant based accounts Edit The accounts considered above are all truth preservational in that they all assume that the characteristic feature of a good inference is that it never allows one to move from true premises to an untrue conclusion As an alternative some have proposed warrant preservational accounts according to which the characteristic feature of a good inference is that it never allows one to move from justifiably assertible premises to a conclusion that is not justifiably assertible This is roughly the account favored by intuitionists such as Michael Dummett Non monotonic logical consequence Edit See also Non monotonic logic and Belief revision Non monotonic inference relation The accounts discussed above all yield monotonic consequence relations i e ones such that if A displaystyle A is a consequence of G displaystyle Gamma then A displaystyle A is a consequence of any superset of G displaystyle Gamma It is also possible to specify non monotonic consequence relations to capture the idea that e g Tweety can fly is a logical consequence of Birds can typically fly Tweety is a bird but not of Birds can typically fly Tweety is a bird Tweety is a penguin See also EditAbstract algebraic logic Ampheck Boolean algebra logic Boolean domain Boolean function Boolean logic Causality Deductive reasoning Logic gate Logical graph Peirce s law Probabilistic logic Propositional calculus Sole sufficient operator Strict conditional Tautology logic Tautological consequence Therefore sign Turnstile symbol Double turnstile ValidityNotes Edit a b c d e f Beall JC and Restall Greg Logical Consequence The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2009 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Quine Willard Van Orman Philosophy of Logic a b McKeon Matthew Logical Consequence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Kosta Dosen 1996 Logical consequence a turn in style In Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara Kees Doets Daniele Mundici Johan van Benthem eds Logic and Scientific Methods Volume One of the Tenth International Congress of Logic Methodology and Philosophy of Science Florence August 1995 Springer p 292 ISBN 978 0 7923 4383 7 Dummett Michael 1993 philosophy of language Harvard University Press p 82ff Lear Jonathan 1986 and Logical Theory Cambridge University Press 136p Creath Richard and Friedman Michael 2007 Cambridge companion to Carnap Cambridge University Press 371p FOLDOC syntactic consequence Archived 2013 04 03 at the Wayback Machine a b S C Kleene Introduction to Metamathematics 1952 Van Nostrand Publishing p 88 Hunter Geoffrey Metalogic An Introduction to the Metatheory of Standard First Order Logic University of California Press 1971 p 75 Etchemendy John Logical consequence The Cambridge Dictionary of PhilosophyResources EditAnderson A R Belnap N D Jr 1975 Entailment vol 1 Princeton NJ Princeton Augusto Luis M 2017 Logical consequences Theory and applications An introduction London College Publications Series Mathematical logic and foundations Barwise Jon Etchemendy John 2008 Language Proof and Logic Stanford CSLI Publications Brown Frank Markham 2003 Boolean Reasoning The Logic of Boolean Equations 1st edition Kluwer Academic Publishers Norwell MA 2nd edition Dover Publications Mineola NY 2003 Davis Martin ed 1965 The Undecidable Basic Papers on Undecidable Propositions Unsolvable Problems And Computable Functions New York Raven Press ISBN 9780486432281 Papers include those by Godel Church Rosser Kleene and Post Dummett Michael 1991 The Logical Basis of Metaphysics Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674537866 Edgington Dorothy 2001 Conditionals Blackwell in Lou Goble ed The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic Edgington Dorothy 2006 Indicative Conditionals Conditionals Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University in Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Etchemendy John 1990 The Concept of Logical Consequence Harvard University Press Goble Lou ed 2001 The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic Blackwell Hanson William H 1997 The concept of logical consequence The Philosophical Review 106 3 365 409 doi 10 2307 2998398 JSTOR 2998398 365 409 Hendricks Vincent F 2005 Thought 2 Talk A Crash Course in Reflection and Expression New York Automatic Press VIP ISBN 978 87 991013 7 5 Planchette P A 2001 Logical Consequence in Goble Lou ed The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic Blackwell Quine W V 1982 Methods of Logic Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1st ed 1950 2nd ed 1959 3rd ed 1972 4th edition 1982 Shapiro Stewart 2002 Necessity meaning and rationality the notion of logical consequence in D Jacquette ed A Companion to Philosophical Logic Blackwell Tarski Alfred 1936 On the concept of logical consequence Reprinted in Tarski A 1983 Logic Semantics Metamathematics 2nd ed Oxford University Press Originally published in Polish and German Ryszard Wojcicki 1988 Theory of Logical Calculi Basic Theory of Consequence Operations Springer ISBN 978 90 277 2785 5 A paper on implication from math niu edu Implication Archived 2014 10 21 at the Wayback Machine A definition of implicant AllWordsExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Logical consequence Beall Jc Restall Greg 2013 11 19 Logical Consequence In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2016 ed Logical consequence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Logical consequence at the Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project Logical consequence at PhilPapers Implication Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Logical consequence amp oldid 1146502098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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