🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

Introduction to Logic

Product image 1

Introduction to Logic

First published in Polish in 1936, this classic work was originally written as a popular scientific book — one that would present to the educated lay reader a clear picture of certain powerful trends of thought in modern logic. According to the author, these trends sought to create a unified conceptual apparatus as a common basis for the whole of human knowledge.
Because these new developments in logical thought tended to perfect and sharpen the deductive method, an indispensable tool in many fields for deriving conclusions from accepted assumptions, the author decided to widen the scope of the work. In subsequent editions he revised the book to make it also a text on which to base an elementary college course in logic and the methodology of deductive sciences. It is this revised edition that is reprinted here.
Part One deals with elements of logic and the deductive method, including the use of variables, sentential calculus, theory of identity, theory of classes, theory of relations and the deductive method. The Second Part covers applications of logic and methodology in constructing mathematical theories, including laws of order for numbers, laws of addition and subtraction, methodological considerations on the constructed theory, foundations of arithmetic of real numbers, and more. The author has provided numerous exercises to help students assimilate the material, which not only provides a stimulating and thought-provoking introduction to the fundamentals of logical thought, but is the perfect adjunct to courses in logic and the foundation of mathematics.

Reprint of the Oxford University Press, New York, 1946 edition.
mathematical discipline;circuit design;professional mathematicians;logical theory;common basis;deductive method;mathematical logic;popular scientific;practical importance;modern master;formal logic;uc berkeley;everyday language;human knowledge;serious students;ebbinghaus;flum;mendelson;1967;arithmetical;logics;logicians;analytics;primer;theorems;axiom;hodges;qualification;arithmetic;laymen;inference;calculus;apparatus;fragment;aristotle;exercises;conceptual;infer;mathematician;sciences;1940;concentrated;mathematics;philosopher;abstract;introductory;books on mathematics
$12.95
Introduction to Logic—
$12.95

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

First published in Polish in 1936, this classic work was originally written as a popular scientific book — one that would present to the educated lay reader a clear picture of certain powerful trends of thought in modern logic. According to the author, these trends sought to create a unified conceptual apparatus as a common basis for the whole of human knowledge.
Because these new developments in logical thought tended to perfect and sharpen the deductive method, an indispensable tool in many fields for deriving conclusions from accepted assumptions, the author decided to widen the scope of the work. In subsequent editions he revised the book to make it also a text on which to base an elementary college course in logic and the methodology of deductive sciences. It is this revised edition that is reprinted here.
Part One deals with elements of logic and the deductive method, including the use of variables, sentential calculus, theory of identity, theory of classes, theory of relations and the deductive method. The Second Part covers applications of logic and methodology in constructing mathematical theories, including laws of order for numbers, laws of addition and subtraction, methodological considerations on the constructed theory, foundations of arithmetic of real numbers, and more. The author has provided numerous exercises to help students assimilate the material, which not only provides a stimulating and thought-provoking introduction to the fundamentals of logical thought, but is the perfect adjunct to courses in logic and the foundation of mathematics.

Reprint of the Oxford University Press, New York, 1946 edition.
mathematical discipline;circuit design;professional mathematicians;logical theory;common basis;deductive method;mathematical logic;popular scientific;practical importance;modern master;formal logic;uc berkeley;everyday language;human knowledge;serious students;ebbinghaus;flum;mendelson;1967;arithmetical;logics;logicians;analytics;primer;theorems;axiom;hodges;qualification;arithmetic;laymen;inference;calculus;apparatus;fragment;aristotle;exercises;conceptual;infer;mathematician;sciences;1940;concentrated;mathematics;philosopher;abstract;introductory;books on mathematics

You may also like

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1000 Poems from the Manyoshu

$19.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1300 Real and Fanciful Animals

$15.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

103 Great Poems

$12.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1001 Palabras Inglesas Mas Utiles para Hispanoparlantes

$1.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

100 Favorite English and Irish Poems

$3.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1001 Easy French Phrases

$4.95

NEW
Thumbnail 1

101 Great American Poems

$3.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1001 Most Useful Spanish Words

$2.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

100 Best-Loved Poems

$3.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

100 Great American Short Stories

$14.00

$4.90

NEW
Thumbnail 1

"Easter 1916" and Other Poems

$3.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

"To His Coy Mistress" and Other Poems

$3.00

Introduction to Logic | Dover Publications