At the above link you will find "Aristotle’s Prior Analytics and Boole’s Laws of Thought" by JOHN CORCORAN, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF LOGIC, 24 (2003), 261–288
Prior Analytics by theGreek philosopher Aristotle (384 – 322 BCE) and Laws of Thought by the English mathematician George Boole (1815 – 1864) are the twomost important surviving original logical works from before the advent of modern logic. This article has a single goal: to compare Aristotle’s system with the system that Boole constructed over twenty-two centuries later intending to extend and perfect what Aristotle had started. This comparison merits an article itself. Accordingly, this article does not discuss many other historically and philosophically important aspects of Boole’s book, e.g. his confused attempt to apply differential calculus to logic, his misguided effort tomake his system of ‘class logic’ serve as a kind of ‘truth-functional logic’, his now almost forgotten foray into probability theory, or his blindness to the fact that a truth-functional combination of equations that follows from a given truth-functional combination of equations need not follow truth-functionally. One of themain conclusions is that Boole’s contribution widened logic and changed its nature to such an extent that he fully deserves to share with Aristotle the status of being a founding figure in logic. By setting forth in clear and systematic fashion the basic methods for establishing validity and for establishing invalidity, Aristotle became the founder of logic as formal epistemology. By making the first unmistakable steps toward opening logic to the study of ‘laws of thought’—tautologies and laws such as excluded middle and non-contradiction—Boole became the founder of logic as formal ontology.
Also, you'll be more successful in finding material if you spell Boole correctly.
Another paper by Corcoran at http://philpapers.org/archive/CORNO.pdf
Notes on the Founding of Logics and Metalogic: Aristotle, Boole, and Tarski
What would make a good source probably depends on what level of depth about the models of logic, and about the history, that you’re looking for. Among the possibilities are the Handbook of the History of Logic if you’re looking for an edited volume of essays on particular aspects (1st link) or Logician Bertrand Russell’s History of Western Philosophy if you’re looking for more of a cohesive narrative within the worldview from Aristotle to Bool (2nd link). Best wishes with your project Subrata. ~ Kevin
Perhaps, it would be beneficial for you to read the book "An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic" by Priest if you had time for it. This book is helpful for me. Regards, Eliza
Aristotle's collection of logical treatises is known as the Organon. Of these treatises, the Prior Analytics contains the most systematic discussion of formal logic. In addition to the Organon, the Metaphysics2also contains relevant material.
W. Kneale, M. Kneale, The Development of Logic, J. Lear, Aristotle and Logical Theory,, P. Thom, Syllogism, chapter on logic in the Cambridge Companion to Aristotle, J. Łukasiewicz, Aristtotle's Syllogistic, J. Corcoran, Ancient Logic and its Modern Interpretations
If one reads German, there is series of books edited by N. Offenberger, published by Olms, about modern meaning of Aristotelian logic. The German title of the series is "Zur modernen Deutung der Aristotelischen Logik" (one or two volumes are in English).
Anyway, to do modern mathematics and physics correctly by using a suitable logic for it, I need at least three+unknown valued logic which does not seem to be clearly described in books nor in articles printed in journals. A deeper analysis of what significant has been discovered so far is needed .
Thank you Prof. Wajck. Can you share your plan with me? I want to study the problem. Its much interesteng. This may be related to incomplete information system.
Yes, I have been working in this area, also on a three-valuead+unknown logic for an axiomatic theory of classes for some time. I apply it even during my lectures for students to explain to them and to myself some proofs of independence. I also have unpublished manuscripts. I wonder whether I will be able to publish them in a not-too-distant future to consider such a publication beneficial also for me.
For an appraisal of Aristotle's achievements from a point of view of contemporary discussions, I recommend Paolo Crivelli's paper "Aristotle's Logic" , which is Chapter 6 of The Oxford Handbook of Aristotle, edited by Christopher Shields, Oxford University Press, 2012.
Since theories are good as far as they have a practical application, I take this opportunity to present here such an application [a solar locating and tracking system], based on logical steps and implementation of circuitry based on Boolean algebra machine language use: