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This volume honours the life and work of Solomon Feferman, one of
the most prominent mathematical logicians of the latter half of the
20th century. In the collection of essays presented here,
researchers examine Feferman's work on mathematical as well as
specific methodological and philosophical issues that tie into
mathematics. Feferman's work was largely based in mathematical
logic (namely model theory, set theory, proof theory and
computability theory), but also branched out into methodological
and philosophical issues, making it well known beyond the borders
of the mathematics community. With regard to methodological issues,
Feferman supported concrete projects. On the one hand, these
projects calibrate the proof theoretic strength of subsystems of
analysis and set theory and provide ways of overcoming the
limitations imposed by Goedel's incompleteness theorems through
appropriate conceptual expansions. On the other, they seek to
identify novel axiomatic foundations for mathematical practice,
truth theories, and category theory. In his philosophical research,
Feferman explored questions such as "What is logic?" and proposed
particular positions regarding the foundations of mathematics
including, for example, his "conceptual structuralism." The
contributing authors of the volume examine all of the above issues.
Their papers are accompanied by an autobiography presented by
Feferman that reflects on the evolution and intellectual contexts
of his work. The contributing authors critically examine Feferman's
work and, in part, actively expand on his concrete mathematical
projects. The volume illuminates Feferman's distinctive work and,
in the process, provides an enlightening perspective on the
foundations of mathematics and logic.
Can language change be modelled as an evolutionary process? Can
notions like variation, selection and competition be fruitfully
applied to facts of language development? The present volume ties
together various strands of linguistic research which can bring us
towards an answer to these questions. In one of the youngest and
rapidly growing areas of linguistic research, mathematical models
and simulations of competition based developments have been applied
to instances of language change. By matching the predicted and
observed developmental trends, researchers gauge existing models to
the needs of linguistic applications and evaluate the fruitfulness
of evolutionary models in linguistics. The present volume confronts
these studies with more empirically-based studies in creolization
and historical language change which bear on key concepts of
evolutionary models. What does it mean for a linguistic
construction to survive its competitors? How do the interacting
factors in phases of creolization differ from those in ordinary
language change, and how - consequently - might Creole languages
differ structurally from older languages? Some of the authors,
finally, also address the question how different aspects of our
linguistic competence tie in with our more elementary cognitive
capacities. The volume contains contributions by Brady Clark et
al., Elly van Gelderen, Alain Kihm, Manfred Krifka, Wouter Kusters,
Robert van Rooij, Anette Rosenbach, John McWhorter, Teresa
Satterfield, Michael Tomasello and Elizabeth C. Traugott. The book
brings together contributions from two areas of research: the study
of language evolution by means of methods from artifical
intelligence/artificial life (like computer simulations and
analytic mathematical methods) on the one hand, and empirically
oriented research from historical linguistics and creolisation
studies that uses concepts from evolutionary theory as a heuristic
tool in a qualitative way. The book is thus interesting for readers
from both traditions because it supplies them with information
about relevant ongoing research and useful methods and data from
the other camp.
Ernst Specker has made decisive contributions towards shaping direc
tions in topology, algebra, mathematical logic, combinatorics and
algorith mic over the last 40 years. We have derived great pleasure
from marking his seventieth birthday by editing the majority of his
scientific publications, and thus making his work available in a
unified form to the mathematical community. In order to convey an
idea of the richness of his personality, we have also included one
of his sermons. Of course, the publication of these Selecta can pay
tribute only to the writings of Ernst Specker. It cannot adequately
express his originality and wisdom as a person nor the fascination
he exercises over his students, colleagues and friends. We can do
no better than to quote from Hao Wang in the 'Festschrift' Logic
and Algorithmic I: Specker was ill for an extended period before
completing his formal education. He had the leisure to think over
many things. This experi ence may have helped cultivating his
superiority as a person. In terms of traditional Chinese
categories, I would say there is a taoist trait in him in the sense
of being more detached, less competitive, and more under standing.
I believe he has a better sense of what is important in life and
arranges his life better than most logicians. We are grateful to
Birkhauser Verlag for the production of this Selecta volume. Our
special thanks go to Jonas Meon for sharing with us his intimate
knowledge of his friend Ernst Specker."
ThisbookdiscusseshowTypeLogicalGrammarcanbemodi?edinsuch
awaythatasystematictreatmentofanaphoraphenomenabecomesp- sible
without giving up the general architecture of this framework. By
Type Logical Grammar, I mean the version of Categorial Grammar that
arose out of the work of Lambek, 1958 and Lambek, 1961. There Ca-
gorial types are analyzed as formulae of a logical calculus. In
particular, the Categorial slashes are interpreted as forms of
constructive impli- tion in the sense of Intuitionistic Logic. Such
a theory of grammar is per se attractive for a formal linguist who
is interested in the interplay between formal logic and the
structure of language. What makes L-
bekstyleCategorialGrammarevenmoreexcitingisthefactthat(asvan
Benthem,1983pointsout)theCurry-Howardcorrespondence-acentral part
of mathematical proof theory which establishes a deep connection
betweenconstructivelogicsandthe?-calculus-suppliesthetypelogical
syntax with an extremely elegant and independently motivated
interface to model-theoretic semantics. Prima facie, anaphora does
not 't very well into the Categorial picture of the
syntax-semantics interface. The Curry-Howard based composition of
meaning operates in a local way, and meaning ass- bly is linear,
i.e., every piece of lexical meaning is used exactly once.
Anaphora, on the other hand, is in principle unbounded, and it
involves by de?nition the multiple use of certain semantic
resources. The latter problem has been tackled by several
Categorial grammarians by ass- ing su?ciently complex lexical
meanings for anaphoric expressions, but the locality problem is not
easy to solve in a purely lexical way.
Ernst Specker has made decisive contributions towards shaping direc
tions in topology, algebra, mathematical logic, combinatorics and
algorith mic over the last 40 years. We have derived great pleasure
from marking his seventieth birthday by editing the majority of his
scientific publications, and thus making his work available in a
unified form to the mathematical community. In order to convey an
idea of the richness of his personality, we have also included one
of his sermons. Of course, the publication of these Selecta can pay
tribute only to the writings of Ernst Specker. It cannot adequately
express his originality and wisdom as a person nor the fascination
he exercises over his students, colleagues and friends. We can do
no better than to quote from Hao Wang in the 'Festschrift' Logic
and Algorithmic I: Specker was ill for an extended period before
completing his formal education. He had the leisure to think over
many things. This experi ence may have helped cultivating his
superiority as a person. In terms of traditional Chinese
categories, I would say there is a taoist trait in him in the sense
of being more detached, less competitive, and more under standing.
I believe he has a better sense of what is important in life and
arranges his life better than most logicians. We are grateful to
Birkhauser Verlag for the production of this Selecta volume. Our
special thanks go to Jonas Meon for sharing with us his intimate
knowledge of his friend Ernst Specker."
Recent years witnessed an increased interest in formal pragmatics
and especially the establishment of game theory as a new research
methodology for the study of language use. Game and Decision Theory
(GDT) are natural candidates if we look for a theoretical
foundation of linguistic pragmatics. Over the last decade, a firm
research community has emerged with a strong interdisciplinary
character, where economists, philosophers, and social scientists
meet with linguists. Within this field of research, three major
currents can be distinguished: one is closely related to the
Gricean paradigm and aims at a precise foundation of pragmatic
reasoning, the second originates in the economic literature and is
concerned with the role of game theory in the context of language
use, and the third aims at language evolution seen either from a
biological or from a cultural perspective. Edited in collaboration
with FoLLI, the Association of Logic, Language and Information,
this volume is based on a selection of papers of two international
conferences, one organised at ESSLLI in 2007 on language, games,
and evolution, and the other organised at the ZAS in Berlin on
games and decisions in pragmatics in 2008. This volume is rounded
off by additional invited papers and now contains eight articles of
leading researchers in the field which together provide a
state-of-the-art survey of current research on language evolution
and game theoretic approaches to pragmatics.
ThisbookdiscusseshowTypeLogicalGrammarcanbemodi?edinsuch
awaythatasystematictreatmentofanaphoraphenomenabecomesp- sible
without giving up the general architecture of this framework. By
Type Logical Grammar, I mean the version of Categorial Grammar that
arose out of the work of Lambek, 1958 and Lambek, 1961. There Ca-
gorial types are analyzed as formulae of a logical calculus. In
particular, the Categorial slashes are interpreted as forms of
constructive impli- tion in the sense of Intuitionistic Logic. Such
a theory of grammar is per se attractive for a formal linguist who
is interested in the interplay between formal logic and the
structure of language. What makes L-
bekstyleCategorialGrammarevenmoreexcitingisthefactthat(asvan
Benthem,1983pointsout)theCurry-Howardcorrespondence-acentral part
of mathematical proof theory which establishes a deep connection
betweenconstructivelogicsandthe?-calculus-suppliesthetypelogical
syntax with an extremely elegant and independently motivated
interface to model-theoretic semantics. Prima facie, anaphora does
not 't very well into the Categorial picture of the
syntax-semantics interface. The Curry-Howard based composition of
meaning operates in a local way, and meaning ass- bly is linear,
i.e., every piece of lexical meaning is used exactly once.
Anaphora, on the other hand, is in principle unbounded, and it
involves by de?nition the multiple use of certain semantic
resources. The latter problem has been tackled by several
Categorial grammarians by ass- ing su?ciently complex lexical
meanings for anaphoric expressions, but the locality problem is not
easy to solve in a purely lexical way.
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Computer Science Logic - 6th Workshop, CSL'92, San Miniato, Italy, September 28 - October 2, 1992. Selected Papers (Paperback, 1993 ed.)
Egon Boerger, Gerhard Jager, Hans Kleine Buning, Simone Martini, Michael M. Richter
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R1,732
Discovery Miles 17 320
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume presents the proceedings of the Computer Science Logic
Workshop CSL '92, held in Pisa, Italy, in September/October 1992.
CSL '92 was the sixth of the series and the first one held as
Annual Conference of the European Association for Computer Science
Logic (EACSL). Full versions of the workshop contributions were
collected after their presentation and reviewed. On the basis of 58
reviews, 26 papers were selected for publication, and appear here
in revised final form. Topics covered in the volume include: Turing
machines, linear logic, logic of proofs, optimization problems,
lambda calculus, fixpoint logic, NP-completeness, resolution,
transition system semantics, higher order partial functions,
evolving algebras, functional logic programming, inductive
definability, semantics of C, classes for a functional language,
NP-optimization problems, theory of types and names, sconing and
relators, 3-satisfiability, Kleene's slash, negation-complete logic
programs, polynomial-time oracle machines, and monadic second-order
properties.
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Computer Science Logic - 5th Workshop, CSL '91, Berne, Switzerland, October 7-11, 1991. Proceedings (Paperback, 1992 ed.)
Egon Borger, Gerhard Jager, Hans Kleine Buning, Michael M. Richter
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R1,724
Discovery Miles 17 240
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume presents the proceedings of the workshop CSL '91
(Computer Science Logic) held at the University of Berne,
Switzerland, October 7-11, 1991. This was the fifth in a series of
annual workshops on computer sciencelogic (the first four are
recorded in LNCS volumes 329, 385, 440, and 533). The volume
contains 33 invited and selected papers on a variety of logical
topics in computer science, including abstract datatypes, bounded
theories, complexity results, cut elimination, denotational
semantics, infinitary queries, Kleene algebra with recursion,
minimal proofs, normal forms in infinite-valued logic, ordinal
processes, persistent Petri nets, plausibility logic, program
synthesis systems, quantifier hierarchies, semantics of
modularization, stable logic, term rewriting systems, termination
of logic programs, transitive closure logic, variants of
resolution, and many others.
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Theory and Applications of Models of Computation - 14th Annual Conference, TAMC 2017, Bern, Switzerland, April 20-22, 2017, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2017)
T. V. Gopal, Gerhard Jager, Silvia Steila
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R1,668
Discovery Miles 16 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 14th Annual
Conference on Theory and Applications of Models of Computation,
TAMC 2017, held in Bern, Switzerland, in April 2017. The 45 revised
full papers presented together with 4 invited papers were carefully
reviewed and selected from 103 submissions. The main themes of TAMC
2017 have been computability, computer science logic, complexity,
algorithms, and models of computation and systems theory.
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