
Publication details
Year: 2018
Pages: 5485-5496
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Paraconsistency in classical logic", Synthese 195 (12), 2018, pp. 5485-5496.
Abstract
Classical propositional logic can be characterized, indirectly, by means of a complementary formal system whose theorems are exactly those formulas that are not classical tautologies, i.e., contradictions and truth-functional contingencies. Since a formula is contingent if and only if its negation is also contingent, the system in question is paraconsistent. Hence classical propositional logic itself admits of a paraconsistent characterization, albeit "in the negative". More generally, any decidable logic with a syntactically incomplete proof theory allows for a paraconsistent characterization of its set of theorems. This, we note, has important bearing on the very nature of paraconsistency as standardly characterized.
Publication details
Year: 2018
Pages: 5485-5496
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Paraconsistency in classical logic", Synthese 195 (12), 2018, pp. 5485-5496.