Logical Framework
A structured system of rules, principles, and practices that defines what counts as valid reasoning within a particular context. A logical framework determines which inferences are allowed, what counts as a contradiction, how arguments are evaluated, and what standards of proof apply. Classical logic is one logical framework; intuitionistic logic is another; paraconsistent logic is another; fuzzy logic is another. Each has its own rules, its own domain of applicability, its own strengths and weaknesses. Logical frameworks are not right or wrong in themselves; they're tools for different purposes. Understanding logical frameworks is essential for escaping logical absolutism—the belief that one's own logic is Logic.
Example: "He insisted her reasoning was illogical because it allowed contradictions. She was using a paraconsistent logical framework, designed to handle exactly the kind of contradictory information they were dealing with. Logical frameworks explained the disconnect: they were playing by different rules, both valid for their purposes."
Logical Framework by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 9, 2026
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