Difference between revisions of "Modal logic"

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== See also ==
 
== See also ==
  
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* [[Accessibility relation]]
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* [[Counterpart theory]]
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* [[David Kellogg Lewis]]
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* [[De dicto and de re]]
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* [[Description logic]]
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* [[Doxastic logic]]
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* [[Dynamic logic]]
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* [[Enthymeme]]
 
* [[First-order logic]]
 
* [[First-order logic]]
 
* [[Formal logic]]
 
* [[Formal logic]]
 
* [[Frege–Church ontology]]
 
* [[Frege–Church ontology]]
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* [[Hybrid logic]]
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* [[Interior algebra]]
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* [[Interpretability logic]]
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* [[Kripke semantics]]
 
* [[Logic]]
 
* [[Logic]]
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* [[Modal verb]]
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* [[Multi-valued logic]]
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* [[Possible worlds]]
 
* [[Predicate logic]]
 
* [[Predicate logic]]
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* [[Provability logic]]
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* [[Regular modal logic]]
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* [[Relevance logic]]
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* [[Research Materials: Max Planck Society Archive]]
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* [[Rhetoric]]
 
* [[Statement (logic)]]
 
* [[Statement (logic)]]
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* [[Strict conditional]]
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* [[Two dimensionalism]]
  
 
== External links ==  
 
== External links ==  

Latest revision as of 08:59, 29 August 2016

Modal logic is a type of formal logic primarily developed in the 1960s that extends classical propositional logic and predicate logic to include operators expressing modality.

Description

Modals -- words that express modalities -- qualify a statement.

For example, the statement "John is happy" might be qualified by saying that John is usually happy, in which case the term "usually" is functioning as a modal.

Traditional alethic modalities

The traditional alethic modalities, or modalities of truth, include:

  • Possibility ("Possibly, p", "It is possible that p")
  • Necessity ("Necessarily, p", "It is necessary that p")
  • Impossibility ("Impossibly, p", "It is impossible that p").

Other modalities

Other modalities that have been formalized in modal logic include:

  • Temporal modalities, or modalities of time (notably, "It was the case that p", "It has always been that p", "It will be that p", "It will always be that p")
  • Deontic modalities (notably, "It is obligatory that p", and "It is permissible that p")
  • Epistemic modalities, or modalities of knowledge ("It is known that p")
  • Doxastic modalities, or modalities of belief ("It is believed that p")

See also

External links