Meaning and Proscription in Formal Logic: Variations on the Propositional Logic of William T. Parry: 49 (Trends in Logic, 49)

Meaning and Proscription in Formal Logic: Variations on the Propositional Logic of William T. Parry: 49 (Trends in Logic, 49)

by Thomas Macaulay Ferguson (Author)

Synopsis

This book aids in the rehabilitation of the wrongfully deprecated work of William Parry, and is the only full-length investigation into Parry-type propositional logics.

A central tenet of the monograph is that the sheer diversity of the contexts in which the mereological analogy emerges - its effervescence with respect to fields ranging from metaphysics to computer programming - provides compelling evidence that the study of logics of analytic implication can be instrumental in identifying connections between topics that would otherwise remain hidden. More concretely, the book identifies and discusses a host of cases in which analytic implication can play an important role in revealing distinct problems to be facets of a larger, cross-disciplinary problem.

It introduces an element of constancy and cohesion that has previously been absent in a regrettably fractured field, shoring up those who are sympathetic to the worth of mereological analogy. Moreover, it generates new interest in the field by illustrating a wide range of interesting features present in such logics - and highlighting these features to appeal to researchers in many fields.



$117.03

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 211
Edition: 1st ed. 2017
Publisher: Springer
Published: 01 Feb 2018

ISBN 10: 3319708201
ISBN 13: 9783319708201

Author Bio
Thomas Macaulay Ferguson received his PhD in philosophy with a focus on philosophical logic from the City University of New York Graduate Center. He has published material on a wide variety of subjects, including theories of semantic information, many-valued model theory, formal epistemology, and non-classical mathematics. He is currently editing the volume Graham Priest on Dialetheism and Paraconsistency (with Can Baskent and Hitoshi Omori), to appear in Springer's Outstanding Contributions to Logic series. He is working as an ontologist for the Cyc artificial intelligence project at Cycorp in Austin and maintains an affiliation as a research scholar with the Saul Kripke Center at CUNY in New York.