Classical First-Order Logic
Stewart Shapiro author Teresa Kouri Kissel author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:19th May '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Introduces classical logic, and its alternatives. Other books of its type usually do one or the other, but not both.
One is often said to be reasoning well when they are reasoning logically. Many attempts to say what logical reasoning is have been proposed, but one commonly proposed system is first-order classical logic. This Element will examine the basics of first-order classical logic and discuss some surrounding philosophical issues.One is often said to be reasoning well when they are reasoning logically. Many attempts to say what logical reasoning is have been proposed, but one commonly proposed system is first-order classical logic. This Element will examine the basics of first-order classical logic and discuss some surrounding philosophical issues. The first half of the Element develops a language for the system, as well as a proof theory and model theory. The authors provide theorems about the system they developed, such as unique readability and the Lindenbaum lemma. They also discuss the meta-theory for the system, and provide several results there, including proving soundness and completeness theorems. The second half of the Element compares first-order classical logic to other systems: classical higher order logic, intuitionistic logic, and several paraconsistent logics which reject the law of ex falso quodlibet.
ISBN: 9781108987004
Dimensions: 230mm x 151mm x 6mm
Weight: 140g
75 pages