Subfield of logic that studies the features common to all logical systems
This article is about the abstract study of logics. For the digital circuits notion, see Universal logic gate.
Universal Logic is an emerging interdisciplinary field involving logic, non-classical logic, categorical logic, set theory, foundation of logic, and the philosophy and history of logic. The goal of the field is to develop an understanding of the nature of different types of logic. The expression Universal logic was coined by analogy with the expression Universal algebra by Jean-Yves Béziau. The aim was to develop Universal logic as a field of logic that studies the features common to all logical systems, aiming to be to logic what Universal algebra is to algebra, and guided by the features of "unity, generality, abstraction, and undetermination".[1] A number of approaches to universal logic in this sense have been proposed since the twentieth century, using model theoretic and categorical approaches.
History and Development
The roots of universal logic as general theory of logical systems may go as far back as some work of Alfred Tarski in the early twentieth century and Paul Herz in 1922, but the modern notion was first presented in the 1990s by Swiss logician Jean-Yves Béziau.[2][3] The term 'universal logic' has also been separately used by logicians such as Richard Sylvan and Ross Brady to refer to a new type of (weak) relevant logic.[4]
In the context defined by Béziau, three main approaches to universal logic have been explored in depth:[5]
While logic has been studied for centuries, Mossakowski et al commented in 2007 that "it is embarrassing that there is no widely acceptable formal definition of "a logic".[9] These approaches to universal logic thus aim to address and formalize the nature of what may be called 'logic' as a form of "sound reasoning".[9]
Community
Since 2005, Béziau has been organizing world congresses and schools on universal logic.
^The Road to Universal Logic: Festschrift for 50th Birthday of Jean-Yves Béziau Volume I,
edited by Arnold Koslow and Arthur Buchsbaum 2014 Birkhäuser ISBN978-3319101927 pp 2–10