Deontic Logic - Georg-Henrik Von Wright
Deontic Logic - Georg-Henrik Von Wright
Deontic Logic - Georg-Henrik Von Wright
Deontic Logic
Author(s): G. H. von Wright
Source: Mind, Vol. 60, No. 237 (Jan., 1951), pp. 1-15
Published by: Oxford University Press on behalf of the Mind Association
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2251395
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VOL. LX. No. 237.] [January, 1951
M IND
A QUARTERLY REVIEW
OF
I. DEONTIC LOGIC
BY G. H. VON WRIGHT
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2 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
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DEONTIC LOGIC 3
the performance-values of the n given acts for the agent in
question.
We shall call A the negation-name of A, and A & B the
conjunction-, A v B the disjunction-, A -? B the implication-, and
A *--+ B the equivalence-name of A and B.
A name of an act which is neither the negation-name of another
name of an act, nor the conjunction-, disjunction-, implication-, or
equivalence-name of two other names of acts we shall call an
atomic name.
By a molecular complex of n names of acts we understand:
(i) Any one of the n names themselves and any one of their
negation-names.
(ii) The conjunction-, disjunction-, implication-, and equiv-
alence-name of any two of the n names.
(iii) The negation-name of any molecular complex of the n
names, and the conjunction-, disjunction-, implication-, and
equivalence-name of any two molecular complexes of the n
names.
The n names are called constituents of their molecular com-
plexes. If they are atomic names, they are called atomic
constituents.
As to the use of brackets we adopt the convention that the
symbol & has a stronger combining force than v, , and ;
the symbol v than -- and *--?; and the 'symbol than .
Thus, e.g., we write for (((A & B) vC) -Z D) )---> E simply
A & BvC D--
D E.
The symbols , &, v, -s, and <- will be used for truth-
functions as well as for performance-functions. This ambiguity
does not easily lead to confusion and is, therefore, to be preferred
to the introduction of two special sets of symbols.
3. As an undefined deontic category we introduce the concept
of permission. It is the only undefined deontic category which
we need.
If an act is not permitted, it is called forbidden. For instance:
Theft is not permitted, hence it is forbidden. We are not allowed
to steal, hence we must not steal.1
If the negation of an act is forbidden, the act itself is called
obligatory. For instance: it is forbidden to disobey the law,
hence it is obligatory to obey the law. We oughtto do that which
we are not allowednot to do.
If an act and its negation are both permitted, the act is called
1 It need hardly be stressed that the question of validity of various
deontic propositions (other than those which are true on formal grounds)
does not concern us in this paper.
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4 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
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DEONTIC LOGIC 5
0-sentences as constituents of molecular complexes of sentences
should be enclosed within brackets in order to avoid confusion.
It should further be observed that a deontic operator before a
molecular complex of names of acts refers to the whole complex
and not to its first constituenb only. Thus, e.g., P A v B means
that the act named by A v B is permitted.
The system of Deontic Logic, which we are outlining in this
paper, studies propositions (and truth-functions of propositions)
about the obligatory, permitted, forbidden, and other (deri-
vative) deontic characters of acts (and performance-functions of
acts).
We shall call the propositions which are the object of study
deontic propositions. The sentences, in which they are expressed
in our system, are P- and 0-sentences or molecular complexes of
such sentences.
4. A task of particular importance which Deontic Logic sets
itself is to develop a technique for deciding, whether the pro-
positions it studies are logically true or not. (The decisionl
problem.)
Sometimes molecular complexes of P- and 0-sentences express
truths of logic for reasons which have nothing to do with the
specific character of deontic concepts. For instance: If A is
permitted, if B is permitted, then B is forbidden, if A is forbidden.
In symbols: ((P B) -(P A)) (4P A) - (P B)). This
is a truth of logic. It is an application of a variant of the so
called modus tollens which is valid for any sentences, whether
deontic or not. It is, therefore, a trivial truth from the point
of view of our Deontic Logic.
Sometimes, however, molecular complexes of P- and 0-
sentences express truths of logic for reasons which depend upon
the specific (logical) character of deontic concepts. For instance:
If A is obligatory and if doing A commits us to do B, then B is
obligatory too. In symbols: (O A) & (O A -> B) -* (OB). It
is intuitively obvious that this is a truth of logic, i.e. something
which is valid on purely formal grounds. It is, however, not
an application of any scheme which is valid for any sentences,
whether deontic or not. The existence of logical truths which
are peculiar to deontic concepts is what makes the study of
Deontic Logic interesting.
If a molecular complex of P- and 0-sentences expresses logical
truth for reasons which are independent of the specific nature of
deontic concepts, then its truth can be established or proved in a
truth-table of propositional logic.
If, however, a molecular complex of P- and 0-sentences
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6 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
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DEONTIC LOGIC 7
and only if speaking loud is permitted or smoking is permitted.'
Thus deontic functions are similar to performance-functions
(and truth-functions) in regard to disjunction, but not similar
in regard to negation and conjunction. The similarity can be
laid down as a Principle of Deontic Distribution:
If an act is the disjunction of two otheracts, then the proposition
that the disjunction is permittedis the disjunction of theproposition
that thefirst act is permittedand the proposition that the secondact
is permitted.
(This principle can, naturally, be extended to disjunctions
with any number n of members.)
In virtue of familiar principles of formal logic, any molecular
complex of n names of acts has what we propose to call a perfect
disjunctive normal form. This is a 0-, 1-, or more-than-l-
termed disjunction-name of n-termed conjunction-names. Each
of the n original names or its negation-name occurs in every one
of the conjunction-names.
In virtuieof the above Principle of Deontic Distribution, any
molecular complex of n names of acts denotes a deontic function of
the acts denoted by the conjunction-names in its perfect dis-
junctive normal form.
Considernow a P-sentence P c, where c stands for (an atomic
name of an act or) a molecular complex of names of acts. Let c1,
. . . Ck stand for the conjunction-names in the perfect dis-
junctive normal form of c. The sentences Pc,.C . . , P ck
we shall call the P-constituents of P c.
Since, in virtue of the Principle of Deontic Distribution, c
denotes a deontic function of the acts named by c1, . . ., ck,
it follows that P c expresses a truth-function of the propositions
expressed by P cl, . . . , P Ck. Generally speaking: a P-sen-
tence expresses a truth-function of the propositions expressed
by its P-constituents.
Consider n names of acts A1, . . ., An. There are in all 2n
conjunction-names which can be formed by selecting m (O < m
? n) out of the n names and taking the negation-names of the
1 The meaning of " or " in ordinarylanguageis not quite settled. When
we say that we are permitted to do A or B, we sometimes mean, by im-
plication, that we are allowed to do both. Sometimes,however, we mean
that we are allowed to do one and one only of the two acts. Which
meaning the " or " conveys by implication depends upon the material
nature of the individual case, in which it is used. It ought to be stressed
that our use of " or " in this paperis neutral with regardto such material
differencesin the individual situations. That we are permitted to do
A or B means here that we are permittedto do at least one of the two acts,
and neitherexcludesnor includes, by implication,the permissionto do both.
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8 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
That an act and its negation are both forbidden means the same
as that the act itself is both obligatory and forbidden.
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DEONTIC LOGIC 9
At this point an appeal to ordinary language will, I think, be
decisive. We seem prepared to reject a use of the words,
according to which one and the same act could be truly called both
obligatory and forbidden.' If, however, we reject this use, we
must also reject the idea that all the units in a deontic realm
could be false.
Thtis, on the point at issue, the deontic modalities appear to
resemble the alethic and the epistemic modalities rather than the
existential ones.
The restriction on the logical independence of the deontic units,
which we are forced to accept, can be laid down as a Principle
of Permission:
Any given act is eitheritselfpermittedor its negationis permitted.
There are alternative formulations of the principle. We might
also have said: If the negation of an act is forbidden, then the
act itself is permitted. And this again is equivalent to saying:
If an act is obligatory, then it is permitted.
6. Which truth-function of its P-constituents a P-sentence
expresses can be investigated and decided in truth-tables.
We shall here construct a truth-table for the following P-
sentences: P A and P -'A and P A & B and P A v B and
PA - B and PA B<--13 and PA v A. The perfect dis-
junctive normal form of A (in terms of A and B) is A & B v
A&,B. Thenormalformof Ais A A&Bv A.A& B.
The table looks as follows:
PA &B PA &--B PA &B P-A &B PA P-A PA&B PAvB PA-+B PA+---B PAv'A
T T T T T T T T T T T
T T T F T T T T T T T
T T F T T T T T T T T
T T F F T F T T T T T
T F T T T T T T T T T
T F T F T T T T T T T
T F F T T T T T T T T
T F F F T F T T T T T
F T T T T T F T T T T
F T T F T T F T T F T
F T F T T T F T T T T
F T F F T F F T F F T
F F T T F T F T T T T
F F T F F T F T T F T
F F F T F T F F T T T
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10 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
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DEONTIC LOGIC 11
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12 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
'T T T F F F F T
T T F F F F F. T
T F T F F F F T
T F F T F F F T
F T T F T F F T
F T F F T F T T
F F T F T F F T
F F F T T T T T
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DEONTIC LOGIC 13
A (true) proposition to the effect that a certain molecular
complex of P- and/or 0-sentences expresses a deontic tautology
will be called a law of Deontic Logic.
We mention below some examples of suCh1laws. When we
call two molecular complexes of P- and/or 0-sentences identical,
we mean that their equivalence-sentence expresses a deontic
tautology. When we say that (the proposition expressed by)
one molecular complex of P- and/or 0-sentences entails (the
proposition expressed by) another, we mean that their implication-
sentence expresses a deontic tautology. The , propositions
expressed by the molecular complexes of sentences given below
(or by the equivalence- or implication-sentences in question)
are easily shown by truth-tables to be tautologies.
(i) Two laws on the relation of permission to obligation, and
vice versa:
a P A is identical with (O A), i.e. (P A) (O?- ( A)
expresses a deontic tautology.
b 0 A entails P A, i.e. (OA) --- (P A) expresses a deontic
tautology.
The second of these laws should not be confused with the
above (alternative formulation of the) Principle of Permission
(p. 9). In the proof of (i)bthis principle is already assumed.
(ii) Four laws for the "' dissolution " of deontic operators:
a 0 A &B is identical with (O A) & (OB).
b P A v B is identical with (P A) v (P B).
c (O A) v (O B) entails O A v B.
d PA &B entails (PA) & (PB).
The second of these laws should not be confused with the
Principle of Deontic Distribution (p. 7). In the proof of (ii)b
this principle is already assumed.
(iii) Six laws on commitment
a (O A) & (O A B) entails 0 B. If doing what we ought
to do commits us to do something else, then this new act is also
something which we ought to do. (This was the example
of a deontic tautology which we discussed above.)
b (P A) & (O A --- B) entails P B. If doing what we are free
to do commits us to do something else, then this new act is
also something which we are free to do. In other words: doing
the permitted can never commit us to do the forbidden.
c (PB) & (OA -?B) entails (PA). This is but a new
version of the previous law. If doing something commits us
to do the forbidden, then we are forbidden to do the first thing.
For instance: if it is obligatory to keep one's promises and if we
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14 G. H. VON WRIGHT:
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DEONTIC LOGIC 15
9. There is one relevant respect, in which the deontic modalities
differ from the alethic, epistemic, and existential modalities.
It can be illustrated as follows: If a proposition is true, then it
is possible, and if a proposition is true, then it is not falsified,
and if a property is true of a thing, then the property exists.
But if an act is performed (or not performed), then nothing
follows as regardsits obligatory, permitted or forbidden character.
There is thus an important sense in which the deontic modalities
unliLe the alethic, epistemic, and existential ones have no logical
connexions with matters of fact (truth and falsehood). This is
a point about deontic categories which has often been stressed by
moral philosophers.
10. In this paper deontic propositions have been treated as
absolute". They can, however, be made "relative" in
several ways.
First of all, it might be argued that deontic propositions are
sometimes, or perhaps always, relative to some so-called moral
code. What is obligatory within one moral code, may be
forbidden within another.
Secondly, instead of simply considering whether an act is
obligatory, permitted or forbidden, we may consider propositions
of the following type: x is permitted to do A, or x permits y
to do A. Introducing quantifiers we then get propositions of the
type: somebody is permitted to do A, or somebody permits
everybody to do A, etc. The logical systems which we get
by such extensions are of considerable complexity. Their
decision-problem can be solved for many interesting cases, but,
not for all cases.
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY.
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