The Mathematical Analysis of Logic by George Boole

(7 User reviews)   3632
Boole, George, 1815-1864 Boole, George, 1815-1864
English
Ever wonder if you could solve a philosophical argument with math? That's exactly what George Boole tried to do in 1847. This short but dense book isn't a story about people; it's about an idea. Boole asks a wild question: what if the rules of thought—like 'and,' 'or,' and 'not'—could be written down as algebraic equations? It's the origin story for the logic that runs your computer and smartphone. It’s a tough read, but it’s like watching someone invent the wheel for the digital world.
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was, he sometimes tried to make silk purses out of sows' ears. He taught none of us to paint saleable pictures nor to write popular books. A pupil once asked him outright to do so. "I hope you're not serious," he replied. To learn the artist's trade he definitely advised going to the Royal Academy schools; his drawing school at Oxford was meant for an almost opposite purpose--to show the average amateur that really Fine Art is a worshipful thing, far beyond him; to be appreciated (and that alone is worth while) after a course of training, but never to be attained unless by birth-gift. At the start this school, provided by the Professor at his own cost of time, trouble and money, was well attended; in the second year there were rarely more than three pupils. It was in 1872 that I joined it, having seen him before, introduced by Mr. Alfred W. Hunt, R.W.S., the landscape painter. Ruskin asked to see what I had been doing, and I showed him a niggled and panoramic bit of lake-scenery. "Yes, you have been looking at Hunt and Inchbold." I hoped I had been looking at Nature. "You must learn to draw." Dear me! thought I, and I have been exhibiting landscapes. "And you try to put in more than you can manage." Well, I supposed he would have given me a good word for that! So he set me to facsimile what seemed like a tangle of scrabbles in charcoal, and I bungled it. Whereupon I had to do it again, and was a most miserable undergraduate. But the nice thing about him was that he did not say, "Go away; you are no good"; but set me something drier and harder still. I had not the least idea what it was all coming to; though there was the satisfaction of looking through the sliding cases between whiles at "Liber Studiorum" plates--rather ugly, some of them, I whispered to myself--and little scraps of Holbein and Burne-Jones, quite delicious, for I had the pre-Raphaelite measles badly just then, in reaction from the water-colour landscape in which I had been brought up. Only I was too ignorant to see, till he showed me, that the virtue of real pre-Raphaelite draughtsmanship was in faithfulness to natural form, and resulting sensitiveness to harmony of line; nothing to do with sham mediævalism and hard contours. By-and-by he promoted me to Burne-Jones's "Psyche received into Heaven." What rapture at the start, and what trials before that facsimile was completed! And when all was done, "That's not the way to draw a foot," said a popular artist who saw the copy. But that was the way to use the pure line, and who but Ruskin taught it at the time? Later, he set painful tasks of morsels from Turner, distasteful at first, but gradually fascinating; for he would not let one off before getting at the bottom of the affair, whether it was merely a knock-in of the balanced colour-masses or the absolute imitation of the little wavy clouds, an eighth of an inch long, left apparently ragged by the mezzotinter's scraper. All this does not make a professional picture-painter, but such teaching must have opened many pupils' eyes to certain points in art not universally perceived. That was one leg of the chair; another was the literary leg. He contemplated his "Bibliotheca Pastorum," anticipating in a different form the best hundred books, only there were to be far less. The first, as suited in his mind for country readers on St. George's farms, was the "Economist"...

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This isn't a book with characters or a plot in the usual sense. The 'story' here is an intellectual adventure. George Boole, a self-taught mathematician, had a brilliant and simple idea. He believed that the human process of logical reasoning could be captured by a special kind of math. In this book, he lays out his system: he uses symbols (like x, y, +) not for numbers, but for classes of things and logical operations. He shows how you can turn statements like "All humans are mortal" into equations, and then solve them just like you would in algebra.

Why You Should Read It

Reading Boole is like getting a backstage pass to a revolution. You see the raw, first draft of an idea that changed everything. It's humbling and exciting. The prose is dry and technical, but if you squint, you can see the birth of digital circuit design, computer programming, and modern search engine logic in these pages. It connects dots between philosophy, math, and the technology we use every second.

Final Verdict

This is not for casual bedtime reading. It's perfect for the curious reader who loves the history of ideas, the patient student of computer science who wants to see the roots of their field, or anyone fascinated by how abstract thinking builds our concrete world. Think of it as visiting an archaeological dig site for the information age.



⚖️ Public Domain Notice

This title is part of the public domain archive. Use this text in your own projects freely.

Michelle Thomas
1 year ago

Solid story.

Kenneth Perez
4 months ago

Very interesting perspective.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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