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Published in honor of Sergio Galvan, this collection concentrates
on the application of logical and mathematical methods for the
study of central issues in formal philosophy. The volume is
subdivided into four sections, dedicated to logic and philosophy of
logic, philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of science,
metaphysics and philosophy of religion. The contributions adress,
from a logical point of view, some of the main topics in these
areas. The first two sections include formal treatments of: truth
and paradoxes; definitions by abstraction; the status of abstract
objects, such as mathematical objects and universal concepts; and
the structure of explicit knowledge. The last two sections include
papers on classical problems in philosophy of science, such as the
status of subjective probability, the notion of verisimilitude, the
notion of approximation, and the theory of mind and mental
causation, and specific issues in metaphysics and philosophy of
religion, such as the ontology of species, actions, and
intelligible worlds, and the logic of religious belonging.
This book deals with an old conundrum: if God knows what we will
choose tomorrow, how can we be free to choose otherwise? If all our
choices are already written, is our freedom simply an illusion?
This book provides a precise analysis of this dilemma using the
tools of modern metaphysics and logic of time. With a focus on
three intertwined concepts - God's nature, the formal structure of
time, and the metaphysics time, including the relationship between
temporal entities and a timeless God - the chapters analyse various
solutions to the problem of foreknowledge and freedom, revealing
the advantages and drawbacks of each. Building on this analysis,
the authors advance constructive solutions, showing under what
conditions an entity can be omniscient in the presence of free
agents, and whether an eternal entity can know the tensed futures
of the world. The metaphysics of time, its topology and the
semantics of future tensed sentences are shown to be invaluable
topics in dealing with this issue. Combining investigations into
the metaphysics of time with the discipline of temporal logic this
monograph brings about important advancements in the philosophical
understanding of an ancient and fascinating problem. The answer, if
any, is hidden in the folds of time, in the elusive nature of this
feature of reality and in the infinite branching of our lives.
This book deals with an old conundrum: if God knows what we will
choose tomorrow, how can we be free to choose otherwise? If all our
choices are already written, is our freedom simply an illusion?
This book provides a precise analysis of this dilemma using the
tools of modern metaphysics and logic of time. With a focus on
three intertwined concepts - God's nature, the formal structure of
time, and the metaphysics time, including the relationship between
temporal entities and a timeless God - the chapters analyse various
solutions to the problem of foreknowledge and freedom, revealing
the advantages and drawbacks of each. Building on this analysis,
the authors advance constructive solutions, showing under what
conditions an entity can be omniscient in the presence of free
agents, and whether an eternal entity can know the tensed futures
of the world. The metaphysics of time, its topology and the
semantics of future tensed sentences are shown to be invaluable
topics in dealing with this issue. Combining investigations into
the metaphysics of time with the discipline of temporal logic this
monograph brings about important advancements in the philosophical
understanding of an ancient and fascinating problem. The answer, if
any, is hidden in the folds of time, in the elusive nature of this
feature of reality and in the infinite branching of our lives.
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