From Wikipedia
Formal systems in mathematics consist of the following elements:
- A finite set of symbols (i.e. the alphabet), that can be used for constructing formulas (i.e. finite strings of symbols).
- A grammar, which tells how well-formed formulas (abbreviated wff) are constructed out of the symbols in the alphabet. It is usually
required that there be a decision procedure for deciding whether a
formula is well formed or not.- A set of axioms or axiom schemata: each axiom must be a wff.
- A set of inference rules.
I was wondering if "inference rules" of a formal system means inference rules of a logic system? If yes, is a formal system therefore also a logic system?
But a logic system is just an example or a model of a formal system by an interpretation mapping to $\{ true, false\}$, isn't it? From the last link
A logical system or, for short, logic, is a formal system together with a form of semantics, usually in the form of model-theoretic interpretation, which assigns truth values to sentences of the formal language, that is, formulae that contain no free variables. A logic is sound if all sentences that can be derived are true in the interpretation, and complete if, conversely, all true sentences can be derived.
Thanks and regards!
0
by01
, and every1
by11
. – Arturo Magidin Feb 16 '12 at 21:58