modal logic
Britishnoun
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the logical study of such philosophical concepts as necessity, possibility, contingency, etc
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the logical study of concepts whose formal properties resemble certain moral, epistemological, and psychological concepts See also alethic deontic epistemic doxastic
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any formal system capable of being interpreted as a model for the behaviour of such concepts
Example Sentences
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Saul Kripke answered the question, "What are the truth conditions for claims about necessity and possibility?" with his semantics for modal logic.
From Scientific American • Jul. 7, 2018
Some of this had been worked out in a rigorous but limited way, in what philosophers call modal logic, which was first enunciated by C.I.
From The Guardian • Feb. 26, 2013
But modal logic was too limited for computer scientists to use in semireal world systems.
From The Guardian • Feb. 26, 2013
The field was born of the marriage of two existing systems, classical quantified logic and modal logic — a marriage she helped bring about.
From New York Times • Mar. 13, 2012
Among the logics that can be used are classical propositonal logic, intuitionistic propositional logic, modal logic, temporal logic, and others.
From The Civilization of Illiteracy by Nadin, Mihai
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