Logica Universalis: Towards a General Theory of Logic

Boston: Birkhäuser Basel (2007)
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Abstract

Universal Logic is not a new logic, but a general theory of logics, considered as mathematical structures. The name was introduced about ten years ago, but the subject is as old as the beginning of modern logic: Alfred Tarski and other Polish logicians such as Adolf Lindenbaum developed a general theory of logics at the end of the 1920s based on consequence operations and logical matrices. The subject was revived after the flowering of thousands of new logics during the last thirty years: there was a need for a systematic theory of logics to put some order in this chaotic multiplicity. This bo.

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Jean-Yves Beziau
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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References found in this work

A completeness theorem in modal logic.Saul Kripke - 1959 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 24 (1):1-14.
Completeness in the theory of types.Leon Henkin - 1950 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 15 (2):81-91.
A game semantics for linear logic.Andreas Blass - 1992 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 56 (1-3):183-220.

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