There are actually many different kinds of modal logics, depending on what axioms you choose, and what kind of extra concepts are incorporated. However, I will choose a fairly basic set of axioms, and explain them as I go.
What we are trying to do here is model the philosophical concepts of necessity and possibility. If we say a proposition is "necessary", that means that it is true in all possible worlds. The world which we happen to live in is one of those possible worlds. Therefore, if a proposition is necessarily true, then it is true. We will take this as an axiom, which I will state symbolically.
Axiom T:The letter "p" represents a proposition, a statement which is either true or false. "p" could be the proposition "God exists", or it could be the proposition "The moon is made of cheese." When we put a "p
p
However, it is not the case that if a proposition is true that it is necessarily true. For instance, the statement "I have black hair" happens to be true in this world, however, I may have dyed my hair blue in other possible worlds. Therefore, we cannot say without qualification that p
The contrapositive of Axiom T is ¬p
Definition:As we proved in the last paragraph, pp means ¬
¬p
We would like our concepts of necessity and possibility to be properties which pertain to the entire set of possible worlds, not just our own. For instance, if it's possible that dogs exist, then that just means that there exists at least one possible world where dogs exist. Therefore, no matter which of the possible worlds we lived in, we could still correctly state that it's possible that dogs exist. While the statement "dogs exist" may be true in some worlds but not others, the statement "dogs possibly exist" is either true or false in all possible worlds. That is the reasoning behind the following two axioms, known as Axiom 4 and Axiom 5.
Axiom 4:Another thing we would like is for our axioms to be true in all possible worlds. It would be quite absurd if, for instance, Axiom T was true in our world, but not in others. And so we take this as a new axiom.p
![]()
![]()
p
Axiom 5:p
![]()
![]()
p
Axiom N: All axioms, as well as theorems proven from them, are necessarily trueApplying Axiom N to Axiom T, we could say
Axiom K:This means that if p(p
q)
(
p
![]()
q)
A summary:
- Definition:
p denotes the statement that p is "necessary", or true in all possible worlds.
- Definition:
p, or ¬
¬p denotes the statement that p is "possible", or true in at least one world.
- Axiom T:
p
p "If a statement is true in all possible worlds, then it is true in our world."
- Axiom 4:
p
p "Necessity is a property of all possible worlds."
- Axiom 5:
p
p "Possibility is a property of all possible worlds."
- Axiom K:
(p
q)
(
p
q) "If p implies q in all worlds, and p is true in all worlds, then q is true in all worlds"
- Axiom N: All axioms, as well as theorems proven from them, are necessarily true
0 comments:
Post a Comment