Handbook of Loaic and Lanauaoe. Edited by Johan van Benthem and Alice ter Muelen. Eisevier/MIT Press, Amsterdam/Cambridge, MA. (1997). 1247 pages. $150.00. Contents: Preface. List of contributors. Abbreviations of journal titles. Part I. Frameworks. Introduction. 1. Montague grammar (B.H. Partee wit
Language in action: Categories, lambdas and dynamic logic Johan van Benthem
โ Scribed by David Israel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 526 KB
- Volume
- 63
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3702
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Background to the book
For about two thousand years, logic and logicians were stuck on the problem of multiple quantification. Aristotle and his successors had systematized large parts of monadic quantification theory (as we now call it), but very little progress had been made on extending the Aristotelian account to sentences involving more than one quantified noun phrase, as in "Every logician admires someone," (This happens to follow from the truth of "Every logician admires Johan.") Such sentences will involve relational expressions; and relations in general remained enough of a mystery that many denied their reality. In the nineteenth century, DeMorgan, Schr6der, and Peirce instituted the algebraic study of relations, in particular binary relations. But it fell to Frege to solve the problem of multiple quantification; thus it is Frege who gets the credit for producing, more or less whole, modern quantification theory.
A crucial part of Frege's approach was to abandon or ignore the traditional decomposition of sentences into subject and predicate. These were notions that had been given no precise mathematico-logical content. In place of this decomposition, Frege attempted systematically to think of sentences and other complex expressions as constructed by way of applying syntactic functions to expressions. Moreover, these syntactic functions were to correspond,
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES