The kernel maintains a current directory (by inode) and when you need the current directory, it determines its name by walking up the directory tree (using ..) to find the names of all the path components. This is the 'real' or sometimes called 'physical' working directory. There is a library function getcwd(3) which does this for you; on more-recent Linux systems this is actually a system call, which helps with getting a consistent view should the parent directories be in the process of being renamed.
Some shells, notably bash, maintain a environment variable PWD to keep track of where you are, and if you changed directory through a symbolic link, this environment variable will show that. They call this the 'logical' path.
/bin/pwd shows the result of getcwd(3), ie the real path; if you give it -L it will tell you the value of PWD (unless it's rubbish, then you get the real path). (Gnu's version of /bin/pwd does more work than this to deal with complexities of parent directories without read permission and very long path names.)
Bash's built-in pwd shows you the 'logical' path with whatever symlinks you used to get there; even if it's now rubbish (ie deleted or renamed since you used it). The default of the built-in pwd can be changed with set -o physical (on) or set +o physical (off is plus!) The default prompt (containing the current directory) follows the option too.
# make a directory with a symlink alias
cd /tmp
mkdir real
ln -s real sym
cd sym
pwd # will say sym
pwd -L # will say sym
pwd -P # will say real
/bin/pwd # will say real
/bin/pwd -L # will say sym
/bin/pwd -P # will say real
rm /tmp/sym
pwd # says sym, though link no longer exists
/bin/pwd -L # will say real!
rmdir /tmp/real
pwd # says sym, though no directory exists
/bin/pwd # says error, as there isn't one
For what it's worth, my opinion is that all the 'logical' business is just adding to the confusion; the old way was the better way. It's true that symbolic links can be confusing, but this makes it more confusing, because any file operations which open .. don't do the same thing as any directory changes which use .. for example in this rather nasty example:
mkdir -p /tmp/dir/subdir
ln -s /tmp/dir/subdir /tmp/a
cd /tmp/a
ls .. # shows contents of /tmp/dir
(cd .. ; ls) # shows contents of /tmp
To avoid all this, you can put the following in your ~/.bashrc
set -o physical
Hope that helps!
Kind regards,
J.
PS The above is pretty specific to Linux and Gnu bash; other shells and systems are similar but different.