St. Augustine's Press

George Boole (1815–1864) is renowned as the first logician to apply algebraic methods to logic successfully. His Mathematical Analysis of Logic, first published in 1847, was the ground-breaking work that laid the foundations for what is known today as Boolean algebra and the propositional calculus. Written in response to the altercation between Sr. William Hamilton and Augustus de Morgan over the quantification of the predicate within syllogistic theory, its remarkable innovations led other logicians, among them William Stanley Jevons, John Venn, Charles
Sanders Peirce, and Ernst Schröder, to refine and develop Boole’s system. In
turn, their efforts were incorporated by Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand
Russell into the monumental system of Principia Mathematica. In short, modern
symbolic logic was founded in the pages of this book.

 

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The Mathematical Analysis
of Logic

George Boole

introduction by John Slater
1-85506-583-5 1998 $14.00tx (£9.50)
96 pp., paperback, 1847 edition
notes
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