Abstract
Modal logic is the logic of necessity and possibility, of ‘must be’ and ‘may be’. These may be interpreted in various ways. If necessity is necessary truth, there is alethic modal logic; if it is moral or normative necessity, there is deontic logic [see chapter 8]. It may refer to what is known or believed to be true, in which case, there is an epistemic logic [chapter 9], or to what always has been or to what henceforth always will be true, which gives an aspect of temporal logic [chapter 10]. Another interpretation is to read ‘Necessarily p′ as ‘it is provable that p′ This chapter will present the general framework of modal logic applicable to all of these, though with emphasis on alethic modal logics.