Projective Logic

WPC–WPO | Authorial scientific archive of I.B. Kurpishev · Logic

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Subject of the article

Within the WPC–WPO archive, projective logic functions as the basic logical layer. The present article treats logic not merely as a list of isolated formal rules, but as an order of projections in which propositions, truth conditions, and inference are coordinated through a single perspective structure. This makes it possible to connect logic with causality, directionality of judgment, and the packet organization of rationality.

Main idea

The central claim is that every logical statement belongs to a projective scene: there is a point of departure, a direction of judgment, a field of admissible relations, and a boundary beyond which a statement loses truth-determinacy. Projective logic therefore describes not only propositions themselves, but also the geometry of their mutual placement.

Logical framework

In practical terms, projective logic serves as a framework for the other logical articles of the archive. It orders the truth criterion, the laws of formal logic, syllogistics, and the packet interpretation of Popper. In this way it acts both as the main navigational node of the logical section of the site and as a language for transitions between form, content, and proof.

Role in the archive

For the WPC–WPO site this article should be read as the entry point into the logic catalog. It does not replace the more specialized texts, but it gives them a shared map: truth appears as structural coherence, logical laws as stable constraints of the projective order, and syllogistic inference as an organized trajectory inside that order.

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