<span>This book is dedicated to the work of Alasdair Urquhart. The book starts out with an introduction to and an overview of Urquhartβs work, and an autobiographical essay by Urquhart. This introductory section is followed by papers on algebraic logic and lattice theory, papers on the complexity of
Peter Schroeder-Heister on Proof-Theoretic Semantics (Outstanding Contributions to Logic, 29)
β Scribed by Thomas Piecha (editor), Kai F. Wehmeier (editor)
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 465
- Edition
- 1st ed. 2024
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This open access book is a superb collection of some fifteen chapters inspired by Schroeder-Heister's groundbreaking work, written by leading experts in the field, plus an extensive autobiography and comments on the various contributions by Schroeder-Heister himself. For several decades, Peter Schroeder-Heister has been a central figure in proof-theoretic semantics, a field of study situated at the interface of logic, theoretical computer science, natural-language semantics, and the philosophy of language.
The chapters of which this book is composed discuss the subject from a rich variety of angles, including the history of logic, the proper interpretation of logical validity, natural deduction rules, the notions of harmony and of synonymy, the structure of proofs, the logical status of equality, intentional phenomena, and the proof theory of second-order arithmetic. All chapters relate directly to questions that have driven Schroeder-Heister's own research agenda and to which he has made seminal contributions. The extensive autobiographical chapter not only provides a fascinating overview of Schroeder-Heister's career and the evolution of his academic interests but also constitutes a contribution to the recent history of logic in its own right, painting an intriguing picture of the philosophical, logical, and mathematical institutional landscape in Germany and elsewhere since the early 1970s. The papers collected in this book are illuminatingly put into a unified perspective by Schroeder-Heister's comments at the end of the book. Both graduate students and established researchers in the field will find this book an excellent resource for future work in proof-theoretic semantics and related areas.
β¦ Table of Contents
Preface
Contents
List of Contributors
Proof-Theoretic Semantics: An Autobiographical Survey
Grundlagen der Arithmetik, Β§17: Part 1. Fregeβs Anticipation of the Deduction Theoremβ
Fregeβs Class Theory and the Logic of Sets
The Validity of Inference and Argumentβ
Kolmogorov and the General Theory of Problems
Disjunctive Syllogism without Ex falso
The Logicality of Equality
Eight Rules for Implication Elimination
Focusing Gentzenβs LK Proof System
Intensional Harmony as Isomorphism
A Note on Synonymy in Proof-Theoretic Semantics
Paradoxes, Intuitionism, and Proof-Theoretic Semantics
On the Structure of Proofs
Truth-Value Constants in Multi-Valued Logics
Counterfactual Assumptions and Counterfactual Implications
Some Set-Theoretic Reduction Principles
Comments on the Contributions
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>This book is dedicated to the life and work of logician Janusz Czelakowski on the topic of logical consequence. It consists of three parts β a biography, a survey and research sections. The volume begins with an autobiographic chapter by Janusz Czelakowski followed by a historical chapter writ
What do the rules of logic say about the meanings of the symbols they govern? In this book, James W. Garson examines the inferential behaviour of logical connectives (such as 'and', 'or', 'not' and 'if ... then'), whose behaviour is defined by strict rules, and proves definitive results concerning e
This book is a monograph on the topic of Proof-Theoretic Semantics, a theory of meaning constituting an alternative to the more traditional Model-Theoretic Semantics. The latter regards meaning as truth-conditions (in arbitrary models), the former regards meaning as canonical derivability conditions
This book is a monograph on the topic of Proof-Theoretic Semantics, a theory of meaning constituting an alternative to the more traditional Model-Theoretic Semantics. The latter regards meaning as truth-conditions (in arbitrary models), the former regards meaning as canonical derivability conditions