Description

Book Synopsis
This Element is an introduction to recent work proofs and models in philosophical logic, with a focus on the semantic paradoxes the sorites paradox. It introduces and motivates different proof systems and different kinds of models for a range of logics, including classical logic, intuitionistic logic, a range of three-valued and four-valued logics, and substructural logics. It also compares and contrasts the different approaches to substructural treatments of the paradox, showing how the structural rules of contraction, cut and identity feature in paradoxical derivations. It then introduces model theoretic treatments of the paradoxes, including a simple fixed-point model construction which generates three-valued models for theories of truth, which can provide models for a range of different non-classical logics. The Element closes with a discussion of the relationship between proofs and models, arguing that both have their place in the philosophers'' and logicians'' toolkits.

Table of Contents
1. Context; 2. Proofs; 3. Models; 4. Connections.

Proofs and Models in Philosophical Logic

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    A Paperback by Greg Restall

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      View other formats and editions of Proofs and Models in Philosophical Logic by Greg Restall

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 4/21/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781009045384, 978-1009045384
      ISBN10: 1009045385
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This Element is an introduction to recent work proofs and models in philosophical logic, with a focus on the semantic paradoxes the sorites paradox. It introduces and motivates different proof systems and different kinds of models for a range of logics, including classical logic, intuitionistic logic, a range of three-valued and four-valued logics, and substructural logics. It also compares and contrasts the different approaches to substructural treatments of the paradox, showing how the structural rules of contraction, cut and identity feature in paradoxical derivations. It then introduces model theoretic treatments of the paradoxes, including a simple fixed-point model construction which generates three-valued models for theories of truth, which can provide models for a range of different non-classical logics. The Element closes with a discussion of the relationship between proofs and models, arguing that both have their place in the philosophers'' and logicians'' toolkits.

      Table of Contents
      1. Context; 2. Proofs; 3. Models; 4. Connections.

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