Logic Certificate Program

“How critical is logic? I will tell you: In every corner of the known universe, you will find either the presence of logical arguments or, more significantly, the absence.”

— V. K. Samadar

Logic is a part of every discipline. There is reasoning in every field of inquiry. There are rules behind every work of art, behind every natural language. There is inference in every intelligence, human and inhuman. Every issue of law and public policy bends to the power of logic.

The study of logic itself is thus of the greatest importance. The Logic Certificate Program brings together aspects of logic from different regions of the curriculum: philosophy, mathematics, computer science and linguistics. The program is designed to acquaint students with the uses of logic and initiate them in the profound mysteries and discoveries of modern logic.  The Logic certificate is open to undergraduate students enrolled at one of the five campuses.

On This Page

Faculty

Michael Ching, Mathematics and Statistics
Alexander George, Philosophy
Lee Spector, Computer Science
Andrew Wu, Computer Science

 

Samuel Mitchell, Philosophy

Jay Garfield, Philosophy
 

Seth Cable, Linguistics
Guillermo Del Pinal, Philosophy
Gary Hardegree, Philosophy
Neil Immerman, Computer Science
Kevin Klement, Philosophy
Angelika Kratzer, Linguistics
Barbara Partee, Linguistics and Philosophy (Emerita)
Alejandro Pérez Carballo, Philosophy

Certificate Requirements

To earn the Five College Logic Certificate, students must complete six courses with a grade of B or higher.

I. One course that covers the metatheory of first-order logic through incompleteness*,

II. Two additional advanced courses in logic (500-level and above at UMass; 300-level and above at Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges), and

III. Three additional courses at any level, one of which may be an introductory logic course.

No more than four courses toward the certificate can be in a single discipline.


*Courses that satisfy the metatheory of first-order logic through incompleteness include:

Amherst College: Math 385, Computer Science 401
Mount Holyoke College: Philosophy 327
Smith College: Philosophy 220
UMass Amherst: Philosophy 513, 514

Courses

Note that if you don't see classes from all campuses currently listed, they will appear as the campuses release their course schedules for the semester. The five campuses release their schedules on different dates. Visit this page for specific dates.

Spring 2025 Logic Courses

Subject Course # Sect # Course Title Instructor(s) Institution Meeting Times
COSC 401 01 Theoretical Foundations Matteo Riondato Amherst College TU/TH | 1:00 PM - 2:20 PM
PHIL 360 01 Language/Method/Nonsense Alexander George Amherst College TU/TH | 2:30 PM - 3:50 PM
PHIL 225 01 Symbolic Logic Samuel Mitchell Mount Holyoke College MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM
CSC 250 01 Theoretical Foundations Pablo Frank Bolton Smith College M W F 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM
PHI 203 01 Modal Logic Chris Rahlwes Smith College M W F 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM
LINGUIST 510 01 Intro To Semantics Ana Cristina Arregui UMass Amherst TU TH 10:00AM 11:15AM
LINGUIST 510 01LL Intro To Semantics UMass Amherst F 10:10AM 11:00AM
LINGUIST 620 01 Formal Semantics Seth Cable UMass Amherst TU TH 10:10AM 11:15AM
PHIL 110 01 Introduction To Logic Kevin Klement UMass Amherst TU TH 11:30AM 12:45PM
PHIL 310 01 Intermediate Logic Gary Hardegree UMass Amherst TU TH 1:00PM 2:15PM
PHIL 595S 01 S-Formal Semantics Gary Hardegree UMass Amherst TU TH 10:00AM 11:15AM

Regularly Offered Logic Courses

Introductory symbolic logic courses:
Smith: Logic 100, Philosophy 202
Amherst: Philosophy 213
UMass Amherst: Philosophy 110

Critical thinking courses:
Mount Holyoke: Philosophy 210

Introductory symbolic logic for mathematics students:
Amherst: Mathematics 385
UMass Amherst: Philosophy 513, 514
Mount Holyoke: Philosophy 225

Incompleteness:
Smith: Philosophy 220
Amherst: Mathematics 385
UMass Amherst: Philosophy 513, 514
Mount Holyoke: Philosophy 327

Various topics in logic and philosophy:
Smith: Philosophy 203
Amherst: Philosophy 350
UMass Amherst: Philosophy 310, 511, 512, 594, 710
Hampshire: Computer Science 210
Mount Holyoke: Philosophy 328 

Various topics in computer science: 
Smith: Computer Science 250, 270, 290, 294
Amherst: Computer Science 161, 241, 401
UMass Amherst: Computer Science 250, 401, 513, 601
Hampshire: Computer Science 175, 263
Mount Holyoke: Computer Science 311

Various topics in mathematics: 
Smith: Mathematics 217
Amherst: Mathematics 380

Various topics in linguistics: 
Smith: Computer Science 294
UMass Amherst: Linguistics 510, 610, 620, 720
Hampshire: Computer Science 166, 210

Contact Us

Five College Staff Liaison:

Ray Rennard, Director of Academic Programs