Logic, within Mathematics & Logic, is the formal discipline dedicated to the principles of valid reasoning, the structure of arguments, and the foundations of mathematical truth. It investigates the rules that govern inference, the formal languages used to express propositions and proofs, and the systems that characterize consistency, completeness, computability, and decidability. Major branches include propositional logic, predicate logic, modal logic, temporal logic, set theory, proof theory, model theory, and computability theory. Logic provides the foundational framework for mathematical rigor, enabling the precise formulation of statements and the systematic derivation of conclusions from axioms. It also underpins computer science - through formal verification, type theory, programming-language semantics, and automated reasoning - and supports disciplines such as philosophy, linguistics, and cognitive science by offering structured tools for analyzing argumentation, meaning, and conceptual structure. As both a theoretical and applied field, Logic clarifies the nature of mathematical reasoning and supports the design of reliable computational and analytical systems.
Within the methodological architecture of the Quantum Dictionary, Logic represents a domain in which terminology is profoundly contextual and shaped by formal system, expressive power, semantic interpretation, and proof framework. Concepts such as “validity,” “consistency,” “soundness,” “model,” or “proof” collapse into distinct semantic states depending on whether they are invoked in classical first-order logic, higher-order logic, modal or temporal systems, constructive or intuitionistic logic, or computational logics oriented toward algorithms and automation. The meaning of core terms varies further with methodological orientation - model-theoretic semantics, proof-theoretic derivations, algebraic logics, or type-theoretic formulations - each imposing unique structural constraints and interpretive commitments. In applied contexts such as formal verification, logic programming, or automated theorem proving, terminology acquires additional layers related to algorithmic tractability, complexity classes, and system specification. The quantum-semantic architecture encodes each logical concept as a contextual semantic entity whose meaning resolves according to logical system, representational language, inferential rules, or computational purpose. This ensures semantic interoperability with adjacent domains including pure mathematics, computer science, linguistics, philosophy, and cognitive science while preserving the definitional precision essential for formal rigor, decidability analysis, and sound inference. By modeling the interplay among syntax, semantics, inference, and computation, the Quantum Dictionary provides a coherent and adaptive lexicon aligned with the foundational, formal, and conceptually exacting nature of Logic.