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Modern Logic: A Text in Elementary Symbolic Logic / Edition 1
Barnes and Noble
Modern Logic: A Text in Elementary Symbolic Logic / Edition 1
Current price: $149.99


Barnes and Noble
Modern Logic: A Text in Elementary Symbolic Logic / Edition 1
Current price: $149.99
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Filling the need for an accessible, carefully structured introductory text in symbolic logic,
Modern Logic
has many features designed to improve students' comprehension of the subject, including a proof system that is the same as the award-winning computer program MacLogic, and a special appendix that shows how to use MacLogic as a teaching aid. There are graded exercises at the end of each chaptermore than 900 in allwith selected answers at the end of the book. Unlike competing texts,
gives equal weight to semantics and proof theory and explains their relationship, and develops in detail techniques for symbolizing natural language in first-order logic. After a general introduction featuring the notion of logical form, the book offers sections on classical sentential logic, monadic predicate logic, and full first-order logic with identity. A concluding section deals with extensions of and alternatives to classical logic, including modal logic, intuitionistic logic, and fuzzy logic. For students of philosophy, mathematics, computer science, or linguistics,
provides a thorough understanding of basic concepts and a sound basis for more advanced work.
Modern Logic
has many features designed to improve students' comprehension of the subject, including a proof system that is the same as the award-winning computer program MacLogic, and a special appendix that shows how to use MacLogic as a teaching aid. There are graded exercises at the end of each chaptermore than 900 in allwith selected answers at the end of the book. Unlike competing texts,
gives equal weight to semantics and proof theory and explains their relationship, and develops in detail techniques for symbolizing natural language in first-order logic. After a general introduction featuring the notion of logical form, the book offers sections on classical sentential logic, monadic predicate logic, and full first-order logic with identity. A concluding section deals with extensions of and alternatives to classical logic, including modal logic, intuitionistic logic, and fuzzy logic. For students of philosophy, mathematics, computer science, or linguistics,
provides a thorough understanding of basic concepts and a sound basis for more advanced work.