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Deontic logic



 
 
Deontic logic is the field of logic
Logic

Logic is the study of the principles of valid demonstration and inference. Logic is a branch of philosophy, a part of the classical Trivium . The word derives from Greek language ?????? , fem....
 that is concerned with obligation
Obligation

An obligation is a requirement to take some course of action, whether law or morality. There are also obligations in other normative contexts, such as obligations of etiquette, social obligations, and possibly...
, permission
Permission

Permission, in philosophy, is the attribute of a person whose performance of a specific philosophy of action, otherwise ethically wrong, would thereby involve no ethical fault....
, and related concepts. Alternatively, a deontic logic is a formal system that attempts to capture the essential logical features of these concepts. Typically, a deontic logic uses OA to mean it is obligatory that A, (or it ought to be (the case) that A), and PA to mean it is permitted (or permissible) that A.






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Deontic logic is the field of logic
Logic

Logic is the study of the principles of valid demonstration and inference. Logic is a branch of philosophy, a part of the classical Trivium . The word derives from Greek language ?????? , fem....
 that is concerned with obligation
Obligation

An obligation is a requirement to take some course of action, whether law or morality. There are also obligations in other normative contexts, such as obligations of etiquette, social obligations, and possibly...
, permission
Permission

Permission, in philosophy, is the attribute of a person whose performance of a specific philosophy of action, otherwise ethically wrong, would thereby involve no ethical fault....
, and related concepts. Alternatively, a deontic logic is a formal system that attempts to capture the essential logical features of these concepts. Typically, a deontic logic uses OA to mean it is obligatory that A, (or it ought to be (the case) that A), and PA to mean it is permitted (or permissible) that A. The term deontic is derived from the ancient Greek
Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek is the historical stage in the development of the Greek language spanning across the Archaic Greece , Classical Greece , and Hellenistic civilization periods of ancient Greece and the classical antiquity....
 déon, meaning, roughly, that which is binding or proper.

History


Pre-History of Deontic Logic

Philosophers from the India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
n Mimamsa school
Mimamsa

, a Sanskrit word meaning "investigation" , is the name of an astika school of Hindu philosophy whose primary enquiry is into the nature of dharma based on close hermeneutics of the Vedas....
 to those of Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece

The term Ancient Greece refers to the period of History of Greece lasting from the Greek Dark Ages ca. 1100 BC and the Dorian invasion, to 146 BC and the Roman Republic conquest of Greece after the Battle of Corinth ....
 have remarked on the formal logical relations of deontic concepts and philosophers from the late Middle Ages
Medieval philosophy

Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Europe and the Middle East in the era now known as medieval or the Middle Ages, the period roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D....
 compared deontic concepts with alethic ones. In his Elementa juris naturalis, Leibniz notes the logical relations between the licitum, illicitum, debitum, and indifferens are equivalent to those between the possible, impossible, necessarium, and contingens respectively.

Mally's First Deontic Logic and von Wright's First Plausible Deontic Logic

Ernst Mally
Ernst Mally

Ernst Mally was an Austrian philosopher affiliated with the so-called Graz School of Phenomenology . A pupil of Alexius Meinong, he was one of the founders of deontic logic and is mainly known for his contributions in that field of research....
, a pupil of Alexius Meinong
Alexius Meinong

Alexius Meinong was an Austrian philosopher, a Philosophical realism known for his unique ontology....
, was the first to propose a formal system of deontic logic in his Grundgesetze des Sollens and he founded it on the syntax of Whitehead's and Russell's propositional calculus
Propositional calculus

In logic and mathematics, a propositional calculus or logic is a formal system in which formulae representing propositional formulas can be formed by combining atomic formula propositions using logical connectives, and a system of formal proof rules allows certain formul? to be established as "theorem"....
. Mally's deontic vocabulary consisted of the logical constants U and n, unary connective !, and binary connectives f and 8.
* Mally read !A as "A ought to be the case".
* He read A f B as "A requires B" .
* He read A 8 B as "A and B require each other."
* He read U as "the unconditionally obligatory" .
* He read n as "the unconditionally forbidden".
Mally defined f, 8, and n as follows:
Def. f. A f B = A ? !B
Def. 8. A 8 B = (A f B) & (B f A)
Def. n. n = ¬U
Mally proposed five informal principles:
(i) If A requires B and if B then C, then A requires C.
(ii) If A requires B and if A requires C, then A requires B and C.
(iii) A requires B if and only if it is obligatory that if A then B.
(iv) The unconditionally obligatory is obligatory.
(v) The unconditionally obligatory does not require its own negation.
He formalized these principles and took them as his axioms:
I. ((A f B) & (B ? C)) ? (A f C)
II. ((A f B) & (A f C)) ? (A f (B & C))
III. (A f B) ? !(A ? B)
IV. ?U !U
V. ¬(U f n)
From these axioms Mally deduced 35 theorems, many of which he rightly considered strange. Karl Menger
Karl Menger

Karl Menger was a mathematician of great scope and depth. He was the son of the famous economist Carl Menger. He is credited with Menger's theorem....
 showed that !A ? A is a theorem and thus that the introduction of the ! sign is irrelevant and that A ought to be the case if A is the case. After Menger, philosophers no longer considered Mally's system viable. Gert Lokhorst lists Mally's 35 theorems and gives a proof for Menger's theorem at the under . The first plausible system of deontic logic was proposed by G. H. von Wright
Georg Henrik von Wright

Georg Henrik von Wright was a Finland philosopher, who succeeded Ludwig Wittgenstein as professor at the Faculty of philosophy cambridge. He published in English language, Finnish language, German language, and in his mother tongue Swedish language....
 in his paper Deontic Logic in the philosophical journal Mind in 1951. (Von Wright was also the first to use the term "deontic" in English to refer to this kind of logic although Mally published the German paper Deontik in 1926.) Since the publication of von Wright's seminal paper, many philosophers and computer scientists have investigated and developed systems of deontic logic. Nevertheless, to this day deontic logic remains one of the most controversial and least agreed-upon areas of logic. G. H. von Wright did not base his 1951 deontic logic on the syntax of the propositional calculus as Mally had done, but was instead influenced by alethic modal logic
Modal logic

A modal logic is any system of mathematical logic#Formal logic that attempts to deal with notions of possibility and necessity. Traditionally, there are three "modes" or "moods" or "modalities" of the Copula to be, namely, Logical possibility, probability, and Necessary_and_sufficient_conditions#Necessary_conditions....
s, which Mally had not benefited from. In 1964, von Wright published A New System of Deontic Logic, which was a return to the syntax of the propositional calculus and thus a significantly return to Mally's system. (For more on von Wright's departure from and return to the syntax of the propositional calculus, see Deontic Logic: A Personal View and A New System of Deontic Logic, both by Georg Henrik von Wright.) G. H. von Wright's adoption of the modal logic of possibility and necessity for the purposes of normative reasoning was a return to Leibniz.

Standard deontic logic


In von Wright's first system, obligatoriness and permissibility were treated as features of acts. It was found not much later that a deontic logic of propositions could be given a simple and elegant Kripke-style semantics
Kripke semantics

Kripke semantics is a formal semantics for non-classical logic systems created in the late 1950s and early 1960s by Saul Kripke, beginning when he was a teenager....
, and von Wright himself joined this movement. The deontic logic so specified came to be known as "standard deontic logic," often referred to as SDL, KD, or simply D. It can be axiomatized by adding the following axioms to a standard axiomatization of classical propositional logic:



In English, these axioms say, respectively:

  • If it ought to be that A implies B, then if it ought to be that A, it ought to be that B;
  • If it ought to be that A, then it is permissible that (i.e. not obligatory that not) A.


FA, meaning it is forbidden that A, can be defined (equivalently) as or .

There are two main extensions of SDL that are usually considered. The first results by adding an alethic modal operator in order to express the Kantian claim that "ought implies can":



where . It is generally assumed that is at least a KT operator, but most commonly it is taken to be an S5 operator.

The other main extension results by adding a "conditional obligation" operator O(A/B) read "It is obligatory that A given (or conditional on) B". Motivation for a conditional operator is given by considering the following ("Good Samaritan") case. It seems true that the starving and poor ought to be fed. But that the starving and poor are fed implies that there are starving and poor. By basic principles of SDL we can infer that there ought to be starving and poor! The argument is due to the basic K axiom of SDL together with the following principle valid in any normal modal logic
Normal modal logic

In logic, a normal modal logic is a set L of modal formulas such that L contains:* All propositional tautology ;* All instances of the Kripke schema: ...
:

If we introduce an intensional conditional operator then we can say that the starving ought to fed only on the condition that there are in fact starving: in symbols O(A/B). But then the following argument fails on the usual (e.g. Lewis 73) semantics for conditionals: from O(A/B) and that A implies B, infer OB.

Indeed one might define the unary operator O in terms of the binary conditional one O(A/B) as , where stands for an arbitrary tautology of the underlying logic (which, in the case of SDL, is classical). Similarly Alan R. Anderson (1959) shows how to define O in terms of the alethic operator and a deontic constant (i.e. 0-ary modal operator) s standing for some sanction (i.e. bad thing, prohibition, etc.): . Intuitively, the right side of the biconditional says that A's failing to hold necessarily (or strictly) implies a sanction.

Dyadic deontic logic


An important problem of deontic logic is that of how to properly represent conditional obligations, e.g. If you smoke (s), then you ought to use an ashtray (a). It is not clear that either of the following representations is adequate:



Under the first representation it is vacuously true that if you commit a forbidden act, then you ought to commit any other act, regardless of whether that second act was obligatory, permitted or forbidden (Von Wright 1956, cited in Aqvist 1994). Under the second representation, we are vulnerable to the gentle murder paradox, where the plausible statements (1) if you murder, you ought to murder gently, (2) you do commit murder, and (3) to murder gently you must murder imply the less plausible statement: you ought to murder.

Some deontic logicians have responded to this problem by developing dyadic deontic logics, which contain a binary deontic operators:

means it is obligatory that A, given B
means it is permissible that A, given B.


(The notation is modeled on that used to represent conditional probability
Conditional probability

Conditional probability is the probability of some event A, given the occurrence of some other event B. Conditional probability is written P, and is read "the probability of A, given B"....
.) Dyadic deontic logic escapes some of the problems of standard (unary) deontic logic, but it is subject to some problems of its own.

Other variations


Many other varieties of deontic logic have been developed, including non-monotonic
Non-monotonic logic

A non-monotonic logic is a formal logic whose Logical consequence Relation is not Monotonic#Monotonic_logic. Most studied formal logics have a monotonic consequence relation, meaning that adding a formula to a theory never produces a reduction of its set of consequences....
 deontic logics, paraconsistent
Paraconsistent logic

A paraconsistent logic is a logical system that attempts to deal with contradictions in a discriminating way. Alternatively, paraconsistent logic is the subfield of logic that is concerned with studying and developing paraconsistent systems of logic....
 deontic logics, and dynamic
Dynamic logic

Dynamic logic may mean:* In modal logic, dynamic logic is a modal logic for reasoning about dynamic behaviour* in digital electronics, dynamic logic is used for circuit design...
 deontic logics.

Jørgensen's Dilemma


Deontic logic faces Jørgensen's Dilemma. Norms
Norm (philosophy)

Norms are Sentence s or sentence Meaning with practical, i. e. action-oriented import, the most common of which are commands, permissions, and prohibitions....
 cannot be true or false, but truth and truth values
Logical value

In logic and mathematics, a logical value, also called a truth value, is a value indicating the extent to which a proposition is truth.In classical logic, the only possible truth values are true and false....
 seem essential to logic. There are two possible answers:

  • Deontic logic handles norm proposition
    Proposition

    This article is about the term proposition in logic and philosophy; for other uses see PropositionIn logic and philosophy, proposition refers to either the "content" or Meaning of a meaningful declarative sentence or the pattern of symbols, marks, or sounds that make up a meaningful declarative sentence....
    s, not norms;
  • There might be alternative concepts to truth, e.g. validity
    Validity

    The term Validity in logic applies to Argument or statements....
     or success, as it is defined in speech act
    Speech act

    Speech act is a technical term in linguistics and the philosophy of language. Precise conceptions vary.Speech act as an illocutionary act...
     theory.


See also


  • Modal logic
    Modal logic

    A modal logic is any system of mathematical logic#Formal logic that attempts to deal with notions of possibility and necessity. Traditionally, there are three "modes" or "moods" or "modalities" of the Copula to be, namely, Logical possibility, probability, and Necessary_and_sufficient_conditions#Necessary_conditions....
  • Imperative logic
    Imperative logic

    Imperative logic is a field of logic that is concerned with imperatives . Unlike deontic logic, which is concerned with obligation and permission, imperative logic by itself is not necessarily tied to any ought judgments on its imperatives....
  • Norm (philosophy)
    Norm (philosophy)

    Norms are Sentence s or sentence Meaning with practical, i. e. action-oriented import, the most common of which are commands, permissions, and prohibitions....


Resources

  • Lennart Åqvist, 1994, "Deontic Logic" in D. Gabbay and F. Guenthner, ed., Handbook of Philosophical Logic: Volume II Extensions of Classical Logic. Kluwer.
  • Hilpinen, Risto, 2001, "Deontic Logic," in Goble, Lou, ed., The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic. Blackwell.
  • G. H. von Wright, 1951. "Deontic logic," Mind 60: 1-15.


External links

  • McNamara, , Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy is a Open access online encyclopedia of philosophy maintained by Stanford University. The SEP was initially developed with U.S....
    , 2006.
  • Lokhorst, , Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2004.