ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1966. Professor Rescher’s aim is to develop a "logic of commands" in exactly the same general way which standard logic has already developed a "logic of truth-functional statement compounds" or a "logic of quantifiers". The object is to present a tolerably accurate and precise account of the logically relevant facets of a command, to study the nature of "inference" in reasonings involving commands, and above all to establish a viable concept of validity in command inference, so that the logical relationships among commands can be studied with something of the rigour to which one is accustomed in other branches of logic.

chapter One|7 pages

Introduction

chapter Two|19 pages

Facets of a Command

chapter Three|16 pages

Terminology and Symbolism

chapter Five|10 pages

The Concept of Command Termination

chapter Six|10 pages

Command Coverage and Decomposition

chapter Seven|20 pages

Validity and Invalidity

chapter Eight|12 pages

Validity in Mixed Cases

chapter Nine|15 pages

Logical Relations among Commands

chapter Ten|4 pages

Command Provisos

chapter Eleven|2 pages

Conclusion