The forms and scope of logic rest on assumptions of how language and reasoning connect to experience. In this volume an analysis of meaning and truth provides a foundation for studying modern propositional and predicate logics. Chapters on propositional logic, parsing propositions, and meaning, truth, and reference give a basis for criteria that can be used to judge formalizations of ordinary language arguments. Over 120 worked examples of formalizations of propositions and arguments illustrate the scope and limitations of modern logic, as analyzed in chapters on identity, quantifiers, descriptive names, functions, and second-order logic. The chapter on second-order logic illustrates how different conceptions of predicates and propositions do not lead to a common basis for quantification over predicates, as they do for quantification over things. Notable for its clarity of presentation, and supplemented by many exercises, this volume is suitable for philosophers, linguists, mathematicians, and computer scientists who wish to better understand the tools they use in formalizing reasoning.
American Gestures : Say it with your hands!
Alex Raffi, Richard L Epstein
bookAmerican Gestures : Say it with your hands!
Alex Raffi, Richard L Epstein
bookThe Pocket Guide to Critical Thinking : Fifth Edition
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bookHow to Reason + Reasoning in the Sciences : A Practical Guide
Richard L Epstein
bookCause and Effect, Conditionals, Explanations
Richard L Epstein
bookThe Fundamentals of Argument Analysis
Richard L Epstein
bookPredicate Logic
Richard L Epstein
bookPrescriptive Reasoning
Richard L Epstein
bookPropositional Logics 3rd edition
Richard L Epstein
bookReasoning and Formal Logic
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bookConventional Gestures : Meaning and Methodology
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bookReasoning in Science and Mathematics
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