
By
General Theorems relating to Elective Functions.
Theorems of Development.
General Solution of Elective Equations.
On Syllogism.
Laws of Syllogism deduced from the Elective Calculus.
In this groundbreaking treatise, the author shows how the mind’s reasoning about classes can be captured with a precise mathematical language. By treating statements about groups of objects as algebraic symbols, he builds a system where logical operations become equations that can be manipulated just like numbers. The approach reinterprets familiar syllogistic patterns through the lens of a symbolic calculus, revealing the hidden structure behind everyday language.
The work lays out a few fundamental laws—distributivity, commutativity, and an index law—that govern these symbols, and demonstrates how they echo everyday expressions such as “good wise man.” An overarching axiom asserts that equalities between classes persist when the same operations are applied to both sides, providing a firm foundation for logical deduction. Readers are guided through concrete examples that illustrate how this algebra of thought can solve logical problems systematically, offering a fresh perspective on the mechanics of inference.
Language
en
Duration
~27 minutes (26K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: MACMILLAN, BARCLAY, AND MACMILLAN,1848.
Credits
Laura Natal Rodrigues and Ray Papworth (Images generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
Release date
2022-12-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1815–1864
A largely self-taught mathematician, George Boole transformed logic into a form of algebra that still underpins modern computing. His ideas were far ahead of his time, linking abstract reasoning with the binary logic used by digital machines.
View all books
by Lewis Carroll

by Lewis Carroll

by Alfred North Whitehead, Bertrand Russell

by Alfred North Whitehead, Bertrand Russell

by Carveth Read

by John Stuart Mill

by John Stuart Mill