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Deontic logic is the field of
philosophical logic Understood in a narrow sense, philosophical logic is the area of logic that studies the application of logical methods to philosophical problems, often in the form of extended logical systems like modal logic. Some theorists conceive philosophical ...
that is concerned with
obligation An obligation is a course of action that someone is required to take, whether legal or moral. Obligations are constraints; they limit freedom. People who are under obligations may choose to freely act under obligations. Obligation exists when ther ...
, permission, and related concepts. Alternatively, a deontic logic is a formal system that attempts to capture the essential logical features of these concepts. It can be used to formalize
imperative logic Imperative logic is the field of logic concerned with imperatives. In contrast to declaratives, it is not clear whether imperatives denote propositions or more generally what role truth and falsity play in their semantics. Thus, there is almost n ...
, or
directive modality Directive may refer to: * Directive (European Union), a legislative act of the European Union * Directive (programming), a computer language construct that specifies how a compiler should process input * "Directive" (poem), a poem by Robert Frost ...
in natural languages. 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'', which is defined as PA\equiv \neg O\neg A. Note that in natural language, the statement "You may go to the zoo OR the park" should be understood as Pz\land Pp instead of Pz\lor Pp, as both options are permitted by the statement; See
Hans Kamp Johan Anthony Willem "Hans" Kamp (born 5 September 1940) is a Dutch philosopher and linguist, responsible for introducing discourse representation theory (DRT) in 1981. Kamp was born in Den Burg. He received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from UCLA in 19 ...
's paradox of free choice for more details. When there are multiple agents involved in the
domain of discourse In the formal sciences, the domain of discourse, also called the universe of discourse, universal set, or simply universe, is the set of entities over which certain variables of interest in some formal treatment may range. Overview The domai ...
, the deontic modal operator can be specified to each agent to express their individual obligations and permissions. For example, by using a subscript O_i for agent a_i, O_iA means that "It is an obligation for agent a_i (to bring it about/make it happen) that A". Note that A could be stated as an action by another agent; One example is "It is an obligation for Adam that Bob doesn't crash the car", which would be represented as O_B, where B="Bob doesn't crash the car".


Etymology

The term ''deontic'' is derived from the (gen.: ), meaning "that which is binding or proper."


Standard deontic logic

In
Georg Henrik von Wright Georg Henrik von Wright (; 14 June 1916 – 16 June 2003) was a Finnish philosopher. Biography G. H. von Wright was born in Helsinki on 14 June 1916 to Tor von Wright and his wife Ragni Elisabeth Alfthan. On the retirement of Ludwig Wittgenst ...
's first system, obligatoriness and permissibility were treated as features of ''acts''. Soon after this, it was found that a deontic logic of ''propositions'' could be given a simple and elegant Kripke-style semantics, 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 Propositional calculus is a branch of logic. It is also called propositional logic, statement logic, sentential calculus, sentential logic, or sometimes zeroth-order logic. It deals with propositions (which can be true or false) and relations b ...
: : (\models A) \rightarrow (\models OA) : O(A \rightarrow B) \rightarrow (OA \rightarrow OB) : OA\to PA In English, these axioms say, respectively: * If A is a tautology, then it ought to be that A (necessitation rule N). In other words, contradictions are not permitted. * If it ought to be that A implies B, then if it ought to be that A, it ought to be that B (modal axiom K). * If it ought to be that A, then it is permitted that A (modal axiom D). In other words, if it's not permitted that A, then it's not obligatory that A. ''FA'', meaning it is forbidden that ''A'', can be defined (equivalently) as O \lnot A or \lnot PA. There are two main extensions of SDL that are usually considered. The first results by adding an alethic modal operator \Box in order to express the
Kant Immanuel Kant (, , ; 22 April 1724 – 12 February 1804) was a German philosopher and one of the central Enlightenment thinkers. Born in Königsberg, Kant's comprehensive and systematic works in epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, and ae ...
ian claim that "
ought implies can "Ought implies can" is an ethical formula ascribed to Immanuel Kant that claims an agent, if morally obliged to perform a certain action, must logically be able to perform it: Kant believed this principle was a categorical freedom, bound only ...
": : OA \to \Diamond A. where \Diamond\equiv\lnot\Box\lnot. It is generally assumed that \Box is at least a KT operator, but most commonly it is taken to be an S5 operator. In practical situations, obligations are usually assigned in anticipation of future events, in which case alethic possiblities can be hard to judge; Therefore, obligation assignments may be performed under the assumption of different conditions on different branches of timelines in the future, and past obligation assignments may be updated due to unforeseen developments that happened along the timeline. 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 In logic, a normal modal logic is a set ''L'' of modal formulas such that ''L'' contains: * All propositional tautologies; * All instances of the Kripke schema: \Box(A\to B)\to(\Box A\to\Box B) and it is closed under: * Detachment rule (''modus po ...
: :\vdash A\to B\Rightarrow\ \vdash OA\to OB. If we introduce an intensional conditional operator then we can say that the starving ought to be 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 OA\equiv O(A/\top), where \top stands for an arbitrary tautology of the underlying logic (which, in the case of SDL, is classical).


Semantics of standard deontic logic

The
accessibility relation An accessibility relation is a relation which plays a key role in assigning truth values to sentences in the relational semantics for modal logic. In relational semantics, a modal formula's truth value at a ''possible world'' w can depend on ...
between possible world is interpreted as ''acceptibility'' relations: v is an acceptable world (viz. wRv) if and only if all the obligations in w are fulfilled in v (viz. (w\models OA)\to (v\models A)).


Anderson's deontic logic

Alan R. Anderson (1959) shows how to define O in terms of the alethic operator \Box and a deontic constant (i.e. 0-ary modal operator) s standing for some sanction (i.e. bad thing, prohibition, etc.): OA\equiv\Box(\lnot A\to s). Intuitively, the right side of the biconditional says that A's failing to hold necessarily (or strictly) implies a sanction. In addition to the usual modal axioms (necessitation rule N and distribution axiom K) for the alethic operator \Box, Anderson's deontic logic only requires one additional axiom for the deontic constant s: \neg \Box s\equiv \Diamond \neg s, which means that there is alethically possible to fulfill all obligations and avoid the sanction. This version of the Anderson's deontic logic is equivalent to SDL. However, when modal axiom T is included for the alethic operator (\Box A\to A), it can be proved in Anderson's deontic logic that O(OA \to A), which is not included in SDL. Anderson's deontic logic inevitably couples the deontic operator O with the alethic operator \Box, which can be problematic in certain cases.


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: : O(\mathrm \rightarrow \mathrm) : \mathrm \rightarrow O(\mathrm) Under the first representation it is
vacuously true In mathematics and logic, a vacuous truth is a conditional or universal statement (a universal statement that can be converted to a conditional statement) that is true because the antecedent cannot be satisfied. For example, the statement "sh ...
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''. Others argue that ''must'' in the phrase ''to murder gently you must murder'' is a mistranslation from the ambiguous English word (meaning either ''implies'' or ''ought''). Interpreting ''must'' as ''implies'' does not allow one to conclude ''you ought to murder'' but only a repetition of the given ''you murder''. Misinterpreting ''must'' as ''ought'' results in a perverse axiom, not a perverse logic. With use of negations one can easily check if the ambiguous word was mistranslated by considering which of the following two English statements is equivalent with the statement ''to murder gently you must murder'': is it equivalent to ''if you murder gently it is forbidden not to murder'' or ''if you murder gently it is impossible not to murder'' ? Some deontic logicians have responded to this problem by developing dyadic deontic logics, which contain binary deontic operators: : O(A \mid B) means ''it is obligatory that A, given B'' : P(A \mid B) means ''it is permissible that A, given B''. (The notation is modeled on that used to represent
conditional probability In probability theory, conditional probability is a measure of the probability of an event occurring, given that another event (by assumption, presumption, assertion or evidence) has already occurred. This particular method relies on event B occur ...
.) 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 deontic logics,
paraconsistent A paraconsistent logic is an attempt at a logical system to deal with contradictions in a discriminating way. Alternatively, paraconsistent logic is the subfield of logic that is concerned with studying and developing "inconsistency-tolerant" syste ...
deontic logics, and
dynamic Dynamics (from Greek δυναμικός ''dynamikos'' "powerful", from δύναμις ''dynamis'' "power") or dynamic may refer to: Physics and engineering * Dynamics (mechanics) ** Aerodynamics, the study of the motion of air ** Analytical dynam ...
deontic logics.


History


Early deontic logic

Philosophers from the Indian Mimamsa school to those of
Ancient Greece Ancient Greece ( el, Ἑλλάς, Hellás) was a northeastern Mediterranean civilization, existing from the Greek Dark Ages of the 12th–9th centuries BC to the end of classical antiquity ( AD 600), that comprised a loose collection of cult ...
have remarked on the formal logical relations of deontic conceptsHuisjes, C. H., 1981, "Norms and logic," Thesis, University of Groningen. and philosophers from the late
Middle Ages In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages or medieval period lasted approximately from the late 5th to the late 15th centuries, similar to the post-classical period of global history. It began with the fall of the Western Roman Empire a ...
compared deontic concepts with alethic ones. In his ''Elementa juris naturalis'' (written between 1669 and 1671),
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm (von) Leibniz . ( – 14 November 1716) was a German polymath active as a mathematician, philosopher, scientist and diplomat. He is one of the most prominent figures in both the history of philosophy and the history of mat ...
notes the logical relations between the ''licitum'' (permitted), the ''illicitum'' (prohibited), the ''debitum'' (obligatory), the, and the ''indifferens'' (facultative) are equivalent to those between the ''possibile'', the ''impossibile'', the ''necessarium'', and the ''contingens'' respectively.


Mally's first deontic logic and von Wright's first ''plausible'' deontic logic

Ernst Mally Ernst Mally (; ; 11 October 1879 – 8 March 1944) was an Austrian analytic philosopher, initially affiliated with Alexius Meinong's Graz School of object theory. Mally was one of the founders of deontic logic and is mainly known for his contr ...
, a pupil of
Alexius Meinong Alexius Meinong Ritter von Handschuchsheim (17 July 1853 – 27 November 1920) was an Austrian philosopher, a realist known for his unique ontology. He also made contributions to philosophy of mind and theory of value. Life Alexius Meinong ...
, was the first to propose a formal system of deontic logic in his ''Grundgesetze des Sollens'' (1926) and he founded it on the syntax of Whitehead's and Russell's
propositional calculus Propositional calculus is a branch of logic. It is also called propositional logic, statement logic, sentential calculus, sentential logic, or sometimes zeroth-order logic. It deals with propositions (which can be true or false) and relations b ...
. Mally's deontic vocabulary consisted of the logical constants U and ∩, unary connective !, and binary connectives f and ∞.
: * Mally read !A as "A ought to be the case".
* He read A f B as "A requires B" .
* He read A ∞ B as "A and B require each other."
* He read U as "the unconditionally obligatory" .
* He read ∩ as "the unconditionally forbidden". Mally defined f, ∞, and ∩ as follows: : Def. f. A f B = A → !B
Def. ∞. A ∞ B = (A f B) & (B f A)
Def. ∩. ∩ = ¬U Mally proposed five informal principles: : (i) If A requires B and if B requires 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 ∩) From these axioms Mally deduced 35 theorems, many of which he rightly considered strange.
Karl Menger Karl Menger (January 13, 1902 – October 5, 1985) was an Austrian-American mathematician, the son of the economist Carl Menger. In mathematics, Menger studied the theory of algebras and the dimension theory of low- regularity ("rough") curves ...
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 th
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
unde
''Mally's Deontic Logic''
The first plausible system of deontic logic was proposed by G. H. von Wright 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 is a collection of formal systems developed to represent statements about necessity and possibility. It plays a major role in philosophy of language, epistemology, metaphysics, and natural language semantics. Modal logics extend other ...
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 significant 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. Although von Wright's system represented a significant improvement over Mally's, it raised a number of problems of its own. For example, ''Ross's paradox'' applies to von Wright's deontic logic, allowing us to infer from "It is obligatory that the letter is mailed" to "It is obligatory that either the letter is mailed or the letter is burned", which seems to imply it is permissible that the letter is burned. The ''Good Samaritan paradox'' also applies to his system, allowing us to infer from "It is obligatory to nurse the man who has been robbed" that "It is obligatory that the man has been robbed". Another major source of puzzlement is ''Chisholm's paradox''. There is no formalisation in von Wright's system of the following claims that allows them to be both jointly satisfiable and logically independent: * It ought to be that Jones goes (to the assistance of his neighbors). * It ought to be that if Jones goes, then he tells them he is coming. * If Jones doesn't go, then he ought not tell them he is coming. * Jones doesn't go


Jørgensen's dilemma

Deontic logic faces Jørgensen's dilemma. This problem is best seen as a trilemma. The following three claims are incompatible: * Logical inference requires that the elements (premises and conclusions) have truth-values * Normative statements do not have truth-values * There are logical inferences between normative statements Responses to this problem involve rejecting one of the three premises. # Th
input/output logics
reject the first premise. They provide inference mechanism on elements without presupposing that these elements have truth-values. # Alternatively, one can deny the second premise. One way to do this is to distinguish between the norm itself and a proposition about the norm. According to this response, only the proposition about the norm (as is the case for Standard Deontic Logic) has a truth-value. For example, it may be hard to assign a truth-value to the argument "Take all the books off the table!", but O("take all the books off the table"), which means "It is obligatory to take all the books off the table", can be assigned a truth-value, because it is in the
indicative mood A realis mood ( abbreviated ) is a grammatical mood which is used principally to indicate that something is a statement of fact; in other words, to express what the speaker considers to be a known state of affairs, as in declarative sentences. Mos ...
. # Finally, one can deny the third premise. But this is to deny that there is a logic of norms worth investigating.


See also

*
Deontological ethics In moral philosophy, deontological ethics or deontology (from Greek: + ) is the normative ethical theory that the morality of an action should be based on whether that action itself is right or wrong under a series of rules and principles, r ...
*
Imperative logic Imperative logic is the field of logic concerned with imperatives. In contrast to declaratives, it is not clear whether imperatives denote propositions or more generally what role truth and falsity play in their semantics. Thus, there is almost n ...
*
Modal logic Modal logic is a collection of formal systems developed to represent statements about necessity and possibility. It plays a major role in philosophy of language, epistemology, metaphysics, and natural language semantics. Modal logics extend other ...
*
Moral reasoning Moral reasoning is the study of how people think about right and wrong and how they acquire and apply moral rules. It is a subdiscipline of moral psychology that overlaps with moral philosophy, and is the foundation of descriptive ethics. Desc ...
*
Norm (philosophy) Norms are concepts ( sentences) of practical import, oriented to affecting an action, rather than conceptual abstractions that describe, explain, and express. Normative sentences imply "ought-to" types of statements and assertions, in distinction ...
*
Free choice inference Free choice is a phenomenon in natural language where a linguistic disjunction appears to receive a logical conjunctive interpretation when it interacts with a modal operator. For example, the following English sentences can be interpreted to mean ...


Notes


Bibliography

* Lennart Åqvist, 1994, "Deontic Logic" in D. Gabbay and F. Guenthner, ed., ''Handbook of Philosophical Logic: Volume II Extensions of Classical Logic'', Dordrecht: Kluwer. * Dov Gabbay, John Horty, Xavier Parent et al. (eds.)2013, ''Handbook of Deontic Logic and Normative Systems'', London: College Publications, 2013. * Hilpinen, Risto, 2001, "Deontic Logic," in Goble, Lou, ed., ''The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic''. Oxford: Blackwell. *


External links

* *
Contrary-to-Duty Paradox
''
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy The ''Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' (''IEP'') is a scholarly online encyclopedia, dealing with philosophy, philosophical topics, and philosophers. The IEP combines open access publication with peer reviewed publication of original papers ...
''. {{DEFAULTSORT:Deontic Logic Modal logic Philosophical logic