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Timothy Smiley has made ground-breaking contributions to modal
logic, free logic, multiple-conclusion logic, and plural logic. He
has illuminated Aristotle's syllogistic, the ideas of logical form
and consequence, and the distinction between assertion and
rejection, and has worked to debunk the theory of descriptions.
This volume brings together new articles by an international roster
of leading logicians and philosophers in order to honour Smiley's
work. Their essays will be of significant interest to those working
across the logical spectrum-in philosophy of language,
philosophical and mathematical logic, and philosophy of
mathematics.
Timothy Smiley has made ground-breaking contributions to modal
logic, free logic, multiple-conclusion logic, and plural logic. He
has illuminated Aristotlea (TM)s syllogistic, the ideas of logical
form and consequence, and the distinction between assertion and
rejection, and has worked to debunk the theory of descriptions.
This volume brings together new articles by an international roster
of leading logicians and philosophers in order to honour Smileya
(TM)s work. Their essays will be of significant interest to those
working across the logical spectruma "in philosophy of language,
philosophical and mathematical logic, and philosophy of
mathematics.
Alex Oliver and Timothy Smiley provide a natural point of entry to
what for most readers will be a new subject. Plural logic deals
with plural terms ('Whitehead and Russell', 'Henry VIII's wives',
'the real numbers', 'the square root of -1', 'they'), plural
predicates ('surrounded the fort', 'are prime', 'are consistent',
'imply'), and plural quantification ('some things', 'any things').
Current logic is singularist: its terms stand for at most one
thing. By contrast, the foundational thesis of this book is that a
particular term may legitimately stand for several things at once;
in other words, there is such a thing as genuinely plural
denotation. The authors argue that plural phenomena need to be
taken seriously and that the only viable response is to adopt a
plural logic, a logic based on plural denotation. They expound a
framework of ideas that includes the distinction between
distributive and collective predicates, the theory of plural
descriptions, multivalued functions, and lists. A formal system of
plural logic is presented in three stages, before being applied to
Cantorian set theory as an illustration. Technicalities have been
kept to a minimum, and anyone who is familiar with the classical
predicate calculus should be able to follow it. The authors'
approach is an attractive blend of no-nonsense argumentative
directness and open-minded liberalism, and they convey the exciting
and unexpected richness of their subject. Mathematicians and
linguists, as well as logicians and philosophers, will find
surprises in this book. This second edition includes a greatly
expanded treatment of the paradigm empty term zilch, a much
strengthened treatment of Cantorian set theory, and a new chapter
on higher-level plural logic.
About the Series: The aim of this series is to bring together
important recent writings in major areas of philosophical inquiry,
selected from a variety of sources, mostly periodicals, which may
not be conveniently available to the university student or the
general reader. The editors of each volume contribute an
introductory essay on the items chosen and on the questions with
which they deal. A selective bibliography is appended as a guide to
further reading. About this volume: When we say a certain rose is
red, we seem to be attributing a property, redness, to it. But are
there really such properties? If so, what are they like, how do we
know about them, and how are they related to the objects which have
them and the linguistic devices which we use to talk about them?
This collection presents these ancient problems in a modern light.
In particular, it makes accessible for the first time the most
important contributions to the contemporary controversy about the
nature of properties. Those new to the subject will find the
clearly-written introduction, by two experts in the field, an
invaluable guide to the intricacies of this debate. The volume
illustrates very well the aims and methods of modern metaphysics
and shows how a thorough understanding of the metaphysics of
properties is crucial to most of analytic philosophy.
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