modal logic

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modal logic

A student studies a diagram of modal logic on a classroom whiteboard.

Definition

Noun: 1. A system of logic whose formal properties resemble certain moral and epistemological concepts. This refers to a logical framework designed to formally capture and reason about concepts like obligation, permission, knowledge, and belief. 2. The logical study of necessity and possibility. This is the branch of logic concerned with the modes of truth, primarily analyzing statements involving what is necessarily true or possibly true.

Usage Examples
  • As a system of logic:
    • Deontic modal logic is used to formalize ethical reasoning.
    • The philosopher developed a new modal logic to model concepts of belief.
  • As a field of study:
    • His doctoral thesis focused on advances in modal logic.
    • Understanding modal logic is essential for work in philosophical logic.
Advanced Usage
  • Alethic modal logic: Specifically deals with the modes of truth: necessity (□) and possibility (◇). For example, "□P" means "It is necessarily true that P."
  • Epistemic modal logic: A type of modal logic used to reason about knowledge. An operator "K" is used, where "KₐP" means "Agent A knows that P."
  • Deontic modal logic: A type of modal logic used to reason about obligation and permission. Operators like "O" (it is obligatory that) and "P" (it is permitted that) are used.
Variants and Related Words
  • Modal operator: A logical symbol (like □ for necessity or ◇ for possibility) that forms modal statements.
  • Modal realism: A philosophical view, related to discussions in modal logic, that possible worlds are real concrete entities.
  • Possible worlds semantics: The standard semantic framework for interpreting modal logic, where statements are evaluated relative to different "possible worlds."
Synonyms
  • Intensional logic (in a broad sense, as it deals with contexts where truth depends on more than just the factual state of the world).
Related Phrases
  • Normal modal logic: A class of modal logics that include the necessitation rule and the distribution axiom.
  • Modal axiom: A formula that is taken as a starting point in a particular system of modal logic, such as axiom T (□P → P) or axiom S5.
modal logic

A student studies a diagram of modal logic on a classroom whiteboard.

Noun
  1. a system of logic whose formal properties resemble certain moral and epistemological concepts
  2. the logical study of necessity and possibility