"Necessity is the mother of invention. " Part I: What is in this book -
details. There are several different types of formal proof procedures
that logicians have invented. The ones we consider are: 1) tableau
systems, 2) Gentzen sequent calculi, 3) natural deduction systems, and
4) axiom systems. We present proof procedures of each of these types for
the most common normal modal logics: S5, S4, B, T, D, K, K4, D4, KB, DB,
and also G, the logic that has become important in applications of modal
logic to the proof theory of Peano arithmetic. Further, we present a
similar variety of proof procedures for an even larger number of
regular, non-normal modal logics (many introduced by Lemmon). We also
consider some quasi-regular logics, including S2 and S3. Virtually all
of these proof procedures are studied in both propositional and
first-order versions (generally with and without the Barcan formula).
Finally, we present the full variety of proof methods for Intuitionistic
logic (and of course Classical logic too). We actually give two quite
different kinds of tableau systems for the logics we consider, two kinds
of Gentzen sequent calculi, and two kinds of natural deduction systems.
Each of the two tableau systems has its own uses; each provides us with
different information about the logics involved. They complement each
other more than they overlap. Of the two Gentzen systems, one is of the
conventional sort, common in the literature.