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020 _a9789400719231
_99789400719231
024 7 _a10.1007/9789400719231
_2doi
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039 9 _a201509030704
_bVLOAD
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_dVLOAD
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040 _aMX-SnUAN
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_cMX-SnUAN
_erda
050 4 _aBC1-199
100 1 _aRahman, Shahid.
_eeditor.
_9308495
245 1 4 _aThe Realism-Antirealism Debate in the Age of Alternative Logics /
_cedited by Shahid Rahman, Giuseppe Primiero, Mathieu Marion.
264 1 _aDordrecht :
_bSpringer Netherlands,
_c2012.
300 _axvI, 348 páginas
_brecurso en línea.
336 _atexto
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputadora
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _arecurso en línea
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
347 _aarchivo de texto
_bPDF
_2rda
490 0 _aLogic, Epistemology, and the Unity of Science ;
_v23
500 _aSpringer eBooks
505 0 _aPreface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Contributors -- Contents -- On When a Disjunction is Informative; Patrick Allo -- 1. Pluralism about Consequence and Content -- 2. Situated and Worldly Content -- 3. Factual and Constraining Content -- 4. Modelling Content -- 5. Three Objections Revisited -- References -- My own truth; Alexandre Billon -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Truth-Teller is context-sensitive -- 3. The Truth-Teller is relative -- 4. Other pathologies of self-reference -- 4.1 The Liar -- 4.2 Other semantic pathologies -- 4.3 Immunity to revenge problems -- 5. Dissolutions, cassations and resolutions -- References -- Which Logic for the Radical Anti-Realist?; Denis Bonnay; Mikail Cozic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. From anti-realism to substructural logic -- 3. Life without structural rules -- 4.The anti-realist justification of substructural logic -- 5. A way out for radical anti-realism? -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Moore’s Paradox as an argument against anti-realism; Jon Cogburn -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Moorean validity and proof theoretic semantics -- 3. On the inadvisability of biting the bullet -- 4. A new restriction strategy -- 5. Is antirealism a Moorean Validity? Reflections on Fitch’s proof and Dummett’s program -- 6. Further reflections on Fitch’s proof -- 7. Berkeley and Davidson’s use of Moorean validities.-References -- The Neutrality of Truth in the debate Realism vs. Anti-Realism; Maria J. Frapolli -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Truth -- 3. Realism and Antirealism -- 4. The prosentential view -- 5. The syntactic function of the truth predicate -- 6.The pragmatic function of the truth predicate -- 7. Epistemology and metaphysics -- References -- Modalities without worlds; Reinhard Kahle -- 1. Modal logic -- 2. Possible Worlds Semantics -- 3. The role of semantics -- 4. Criticism of modal logic -- 5. An alternative analysis of modalities: Possibility -- 5.1 Possibility as independence -- 5.2 Epistemic possibility -- 5.3 The future -- 5.4 Ontological modesty -- 5.5  A cross check -- 6. An alternative analysis of modalities: Necessity -- 6.1 Necessity as binary relation -- 6.2 Variety of alternatives -- 6.3 Unary necessity -- 6.4 The normative nature of unary necessity -- 7. The temporal aspect -- 7.1 The dynamics of the axiom system -- 7.2 Nested modalities -- 8. Conclusion -- References --  Antirealism, meaning and truth-conditional semantics; Neil Kennedy -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Dummett’s antirealism -- 3. Harmony and classical logic -- 4. Antirealist meaning and holism -- 5. The disputed class -- 6. The obtaining of Truth conditions -- 7. By way of conclusion -- References -- Game Semantics and the Manifestation Thesis; Mathieu Marion -- 1. Rethinking the Anti-Realist Challenge -- 2. Towards a Renewal -- 3. The the Manifestation Argument and the Manifestation Thesis -- 4. Concluding Remarks -- References -- Conservativeness and Eliminability for Anti-Realistic Definitions; Francesca Poggiolesi -- 1. Realistic Conservativeness and Eliminability -- 2. Anti-Realistic Definitions and Sequent Calculus -- 3. Anti-realistic Conservativeness -- 4. Anti-Realistic Eliminability -- 5. Logical Variant of the Sequent Calculus -- 6. The Modal Case -- 7. Anti-realistic definitions in past attempts. -- References -- Realism, Antirealism, and Paraconsistency; Graham Priest -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Classical vs Intuitionist Logic -- 3. The Logic of Constructible Negation -- 4.Paraconsistency -- 5. Quantified Intuitionist Logic -- 6. Quantified Logics of Constructible Negation -- 7. Conclusion --  References -- Type-theoretical Dynamics; Giuseppe Primiero -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conditions for type-theoretical Dynamics --  3. Belief Revision -- 4. Belief Merging -- 5. Some Remarks -- 5.1 Admitting Beliefs -- 5.2 Degrees of Belief -- References -- Negation in the Logic of First Degree Entailment and Tonk: A Dialogical Study; Shahid Rahman -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Dialogical Logic and Meaning -- 2.1 Local Meaning -- 2.2 Global Meaning -- 2.3 Play level, Strategic Level and Tonk-like-Operators -- 3. The Dialogical Meaning of Negation and the Logic of First Degree Entailment -- The Logic of First-Degree Entailment -- 3.1 Hintikka’s Trees for Enquiry Games and FDE-Negation -- 3.2 Micheal Dunn’s relational semantics for FDE -- 3.3 A Dialogical Study of FDE-Negation -- Switch of Choices. Is Duality-Negation a Tonk-Like Operator? -- Dual Negation and Dual Dialogical-Contexts -- The conditional in Dual Contexts -- Appendices -- Appendix 1. Note on symmetric and asymmetric versions of the E-Rule -- Appendix 2. The disjunctive property and the symmetric rule for intuitionistic logic -- Appendix 3. Examples -- Appendix 4. Soundness and completeness of Hintikka-trees* for Enquiry Games in relation to M. Dunn’s relational semantics for FDE -- References -- Necessary Truth and Proof; Stephen Read -- 1. Truthmaker Realism -- 2. Incompleteness -- 3. Anti-realism -- 4. Logical Pluralism -- 5. Contingency -- References -- Anti-Realist Classical Logic and Realist Mathematics; Greg Restall -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Logic -- 3. Mathematical Practice and Mathematical Theories -- 4. Consequences of the View -- 5. Miscellaneous Concluding Remarks --  References -- A Tale of two Anti-Realisms; Sanford Shieh -- 1. Epistemological Anti-Realism -- 2. The Bivalence Argument -- 3. Conceptual Anti-Realism -- 4. The Rejection of the Bivalence Argument -- 5. Proof-Theoretic Validity -- References -- A Double Diamond of Judgement; Goran Sundholm -- 1. Introduction -- 2.Judgement and inference: the traditional picture -- 3. The great Bohemian: unary judgement -- 4. Brentano and an alternative unary approach -- 5. Frege’s judgement: truth applied to function/argument structure -- 6. Cambridge truth-making -- 7. Constructivist alternative: Proofs of propositions -- References -- Stable Philosophical Systems and Radical Anti-Realism; Joseph Vidal-Rosset. -- 1. Philosophical systems and philosophy of logic -- 1.1 Vuillemin’s classification -- 1.2 What is a stable philosophical system? -- 2. A case of philosophical dispute: Strict Finitism vs.Intuitionism -- 2.1 The contemporary strict finitist argument -- 2.2 Linear Logic and Radical Anti-Realism -- 2.3 The feasibility criteria: polynomial time computability -- 3. Conclusion: laziness or heroism? -- References -- Two Diamonds Are More Than One; Elia Zardini -- 1. Introduction and Overview -- 2. The Paradox of Knowability and the Restriction Strategy -- 3. A New Threat of Collapse of Feasible Knowability on Actual Knowledge -- 4.Transitivity, Factivity, and the Relativity of Accessibility -- 5. Epistemic Possibility of Knowledge and Feasible Knowability -- 6. Conclusion -- References.-.
520 _aThe relation between logic and knowledge has been at the heart of a lively debate since the 1960s. On the one hand, the epistemic approaches based their formal arguments in the mathematics of Brouwer and intuitionistic logic. Following Michael Dummett, they started to call themselves `antirealists'. Others persisted with the formal background of the Frege-Tarski tradition, where Cantorian set theory is linked via model theory to classical logic. Jaakko Hintikka tried to unify both traditions by means of what is now known as `explicit epistemic logic'. Under this view, epistemic contents are introduced into the object language as operators yielding propositions from propositions, rather than as metalogical constraints on the notion of inference. The Realism-Antirealism debate has thus had three players: classical logicians, intuitionists and explicit epistemic logicians. The editors of the present volume believe that in the age of Alternative Logics, where manifold developments in logic happen at a breathtaking pace, this debate should be revisited. Contributors to this volume happily took on this challenge and responded with new approaches to the debate from both the explicit and the implicit epistemic point of view.
590 _aPara consulta fuera de la UANL se requiere clave de acceso remoto.
700 1 _aPrimiero, Giuseppe.
_eeditor.
_9310939
700 1 _aMarion, Mathieu.
_eeditor.
_9351596
710 2 _aSpringerLink (Servicio en línea)
_9299170
776 0 8 _iEdición impresa:
_z9789400719224
856 4 0 _uhttp://remoto.dgb.uanl.mx/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1923-1
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999 _c312096
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