Justification for Logic So here I'm mostly asking if the components of logic, specifically deductive (although inductive would be interesting to consider too), can have their existence justified. These components would include things like, the idea that you have statements which can have the truth values 'true' or 'false', that you can combine multiple statements together using relations like 'and', 'or', 'if/then' etc, which themselves are truth valued and can be manipulated also, that the particular configurations of truth tables that we currently believe to correspond to these relations are true, (eg, like how the truth table for 'and' is T F F F). So I suppose I'm after a justification for the grounding of logic, if I've not misunderstood you there.
Interesting point you raise about induction in science, one thing which scares me about science is that, despite supporting it and finding it fascinating, I cannot say with certainty that the laws of physics as we know them won't simply change one day. As far as I know, it could be that the actual laws cause this change to happen tomorrow at 6:34am, in which case likely we'd have a particularly difficult morning, and not just because induction's justification has just been wrecked.
You mention assumptions and I suppose this could be the key to this, I have a horrible feeling that we must make assumptions about the nature of justification itself before we can apply it to anything, and that makes it seem feasible that we can make assumptions about the nature of reasoning and thereby develop a system of logic. Perhaps assumptions like, that we can know justification as a concept exists automatically without it itself requiring justification. This then makes me wonder if logic also doesn't require justification, though it also makes me wonder how I can, or whether I need to, justify those assumptions.