The historian of logic
John Corcoran wrote an accessible introduction to
Laws of Thought and a point by point comparison of
Prior Analytics and
Laws of Thought. According to Corcoran, Boole fully accepted and endorsed
Aristotle's logic. Boole's goals were “to go under, over, and beyond” Aristotle's logic by: • Providing it with mathematical foundations involving equations; • Extending the class of problems it could treat from assessing validity to solving equations, and; • Expanding the range of applications it could handle — e.g. from propositions having only two terms to those having arbitrarily many. More specifically, Boole agreed with what
Aristotle said; Boole's ‘disagreements’, if they might be called that, concern what Aristotle did not say. First, in the realm of foundations, Boole reduced the four propositional forms of Aristotle's logic to formulas in the form of equations—by itself a revolutionary idea. Second, in the realm of logic's problems, Boole's addition of equation solving to logic—another revolutionary idea—involved Boole's doctrine that Aristotle's rules of inference (the “perfect
syllogisms”) must be supplemented by rules for equation solving. Third, in the realm of applications, Boole's system could handle multi-term propositions and arguments whereas Aristotle could handle only two-termed subject-predicate propositions and arguments. For example, Aristotle's system could not deduce “No quadrangle that is a square is a rectangle that is a rhombus” from “No square that is a quadrangle is a rhombus that is a rectangle” or from “No rhombus that is a rectangle is a square that is a quadrangle”. Boole's work founded the discipline of algebraic logic. It is often, but mistakenly, credited as being the source of what we know today as
Boolean algebra. In fact, however, Boole's algebra differs from modern Boolean algebra: in Boole's algebra A+B cannot be interpreted by set union, due to the permissibility of
uninterpretable terms in Boole's calculus. Therefore, algebras on Boole's account cannot be interpreted by sets under the operations of union, intersection and complement, as is the case with modern Boolean algebra. The task of developing the modern account of Boolean algebra fell to Boole's successors in the tradition of algebraic logic (
Jevons 1869,
Peirce 1880, Jevons 1890,
Schröder 1890, Huntington 1904). ==Uninterpretable terms==