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Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic (History of Analytic Philosophy) PDF

273 Pages·2012·2.63 MB·English
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Preview Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic (History of Analytic Philosophy)

HistoryofAnalyticPhilosophy SeriesEditor:MichaelBeaney Titlesinclude: StewartCandlish THERUSSELL/BRADLEYDISPUTEANDITSSIGNIFICANCEFOR TWENTIETH-CENTURYPHILOSOPHY AnnalisaColiva 1 MOOREANDWITTGENSTEIN 2-0 0 Scepticism,CertaintyandCommonSense 2- 1 0 2 GFRrEegGoEr’ySLNaOnTdAinTiIONS ect - n WhatTheyAreandHowTheyMean on C e SandraLapointe av gr BOLZANO’STHEORETICALPHILOSOPHY al P AnIntroduction y - e n OmarW.Nasim d y BERTRANDRUSSELLANDTHEEDWARDIANPHILOSOPHERS of S ConstructingtheWorld y sit DouglasPatterson ver ni ALFREDTARSKI U o PhilosophyofLanguageandLogic d t e s GrahamStevens en c THETHEORYOFDESCRIPTIONS m - li NunoVenturinha(editor) co WITTGENSTEINAFTERHISNACHLASS ect. n n PierreWagner(editor) co e CARNAP’SLOGICALSYNTAXOFLANGUAGE av gr Forthcoming: pal w. w AndrewAranaandCarlosAlvarez(editors) w m ANALYTICPHILOSOPHYANDTHEFOUNDATIONSOFMATHEMATICS o RosalindCarey erial fr RUSSELLONMEANING at m TheEmergenceofScientificPhilosophyfromthe1920stothe1940s ht g GiusseppinaD’Oro yri p o REASONSANDCAUSES C CausalismandNon-CausalisminthePhilosophyofAction GeorgeDuke DUMMETTONABSTRACTOBJECTS 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE i — #1 SébastienGandon RUSSELL’SUNKNOWNLOGICISM AStudyintheHistoryandPhilosophyofMathematics AnssiKorhonen LOGICASUNIVERSALSCIENCE Russell’sEarlyLogicismandItsPhilosophicalContext ConsueloPreti THEMETAPHYSICALBASISOFETHICS 1 0 TheEarlyPhilosophicalDevelopmentofG.E.Moore 2- 0 2- SandraLapointe(translator) 01 2 FranzPrihonsky ct - THENEWANTI-KANT ne n o ErichReck(editor) eC v THEHISTORICTURNINANALYTICPHILOSOPHY gra al MariavanderSchaar y - P G.F.STOUT:ONTHEPSYCHOLOGICALORIGINOFANALYTICPHILOSOPHY e n d y PierreWagner(editor) S of CARNAP’SIDEALOFEXPLICATIONANDNATURALISM y sit er v ni U o d t e s n e c m - li o c ct. e n n o c e v HistoryofAnalyticPhilosophy gra al SeriesStandingOrderISBN978–0–230–55409–2(hardcover) w.p w SeriesStandingOrderISBN978–0–230–55410–8(paperback) w m o outsideNorthAmericaonly al fr Youcanreceivefuturetitlesinthisseriesastheyarepublishedbyplacinga ateri standingorder.Pleasecontactyourbookselleror,incaseofdifficulty,write ht m tousattheaddressbelowwithyournameandaddress,thetitleoftheseries g andtheISBNquotedabove. pyri o C Customer Services Department, Macmillan Distribution Ltd, Houndmills, Basingstoke,HampshireRG216XS,England AlsobyDouglasPatterson NEWESSAYSONTARSKIANDPHILOSOPHY(editor) 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE ii — #2 Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic Douglas Patterson VisitingScholar,UniversityofPittsburgh,Pittsburgh,PA 1 0 2- 0 2- 1 0 2 ct - e n n o C e v a gr al P y - e n d y S of y sit er v ni U o d t e s n e c m - li o c ct. e n n o c e v a gr al p w. w w m o al fr eri at m ht g yri p o C 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE iii — #3 ©DouglasPatterson2012 Allrightsreserved.Noreproduction,copyortransmissionofthis publicationmaybemadewithoutwrittenpermission. Noportionofthispublicationmaybereproduced,copiedortransmitted savewithwrittenpermissionorinaccordancewiththeprovisionsofthe Copyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988,orunderthetermsofanylicence permittinglimitedcopyingissuedbytheCopyrightLicensingAgency, SaffronHouse,6–10KirbyStreet,LondonEC1N8TS. Anypersonwhodoesanyunauthorizedactinrelationtothispublication 01 maybeliabletocriminalprosecutionandcivilclaimsfordamages. 02- 2- 1 Theauthorhasassertedhisrighttobeidentifiedastheauthorofthis 20 workinaccordancewiththeCopyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988. ct - e Firstpublished2012by nn o PALGRAVEMACMILLAN C e v PalgraveMacmillanintheUKisanimprintofMacmillanPublishersLimited, gra registeredinEngland,companynumber785998,ofHoundmills,Basingstoke, al P HampshireRG216XS. y - e PalgraveMacmillanintheUSisadivisionofStMartin’sPressLLC, dn y 175FifthAvenue,NewYork,NY10010. S of PanaldgrhaavsecMomacpmanilileasnaisndthreepgrloesbeanltaactaivdeesmtihcriomugphrionuttotfhtehewaobrlodv.ecompanies ersity v Palgrave®andMacmillan®areregisteredtrademarksintheUnitedStates, Uni theUnitedKingdom,Europeandothercountries d to ISBN:978–0–230–22121–5 se n e Tmhaisnabgoeodkaisndprsinutsetadinoendpfaopreerstsusoituarbcleesf.oLrorgegciyncgl,inpgulapnindgmanaddemfraonmufafucltluyring m - lic processesareexpectedtoconformtotheenvironmentalregulationsofthe co countryoforigin. ect. n n AcataloguerecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary. o c e AcatalogrecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheLibraryofCongress. av gr 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 pal 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 ww. w PrintedandboundinGreatBritainby m o CPIAntonyRowe,ChippenhamandEastbourne al fr eri at m ht g yri p o C 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE iv — #4 Contents SeriesEditor’sForeword viii 0 Introduction 1 01 2- 0.1 Expressiveandrepresentationalsemantics 1 2-0 1 0.2 Thereceivedview 4 20 0.3 Themes 7 ct - e n n o 1 IntuitionisticFormalism 12 C e v 1.1 WhatwasIntuitionisticFormalism? 12 gra 1.1.1 Apuzzleaboutconceptsanddefinitions 12 Pal 1.1.2 Tarski,Les´niewskiandIntuitionisticFormalism 16 ey - n d 1.1.3 Formalism 19 y S 1.2 Les´niewski 20 of y 1.2.1 Les´niewski’searlywork 20 sit er v 1.2.2 Les´niewski’slaterwork 25 ni U 1.3 Kotarbin´ski 31 o d t 1.4 Tarskiincontext 37 se n 1.4.1 Theaxiomaticmethod 37 ce 1.4.2 Monismvstolerance 41 m - li o 1.4.3 Fivedoctrines 43 ct.c e 1.4.4 Tarski’sproject 49 nn o c e 2 TarskiasIntuitionisticFormalist 53 av gr 2.1 Theearlymetamathematicalworks 53 al p 2.1.1 Axiomatizingconsequence 53 ww. w 2.1.2 Relativizationtoadeductivescience 55 m o 2.2 Explicitdefinition 62 al fr 2.2.1 Definingdefinition 63 eri at 2.2.2 Twoconceptionsofdefinition 65 m ht 2.2.3 Padoa’smethod 67 yrig 2.3 Categoricityandcompletenessofterms 70 op C 2.3.1 Provablemonotransformability 70 2.3.2 Absolutemonotransformability 76 2.4 Theoryandconcept 80 3 Semantics 84 3.1 Philosophicalresistance 85 v 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE v — #5 vi Contents 3.1.1 Thequantifier 86 3.1.2 Paradox 89 3.2 Mathematicalacceptance 91 3.3 IntuitionisticFormalismin“OnDefinableSets” 94 3.3.1 Theintuitivenotionofdefinability 95 3.3.2 Definingdefinablesetsvsdefining“Defines” 100 4 Truth 108 1 0 4.1 ConventionT 109 2- 0 4.1.1 Terminologicalnotes 109 12- 0 2 4.1.2 TruthintheLvov–Warsawschool 111 ct - 4.1.3 Semanticconceptsinamathematicaltheory 114 ne n o 4.1.4 T-sentences 117 C e v 4.2 Tarski’sdefinitions 122 gra 4.2.1 Truthforthelanguageofthecalculusofclasses 122 Pal 4.2.2 Higherorderandpolyadicity 124 ey - n d 4.2.3 Domainrelativizationandconsequence 128 y S 4.3 EvaluatingTarski’saccount 129 of y 4.3.1 Familiarquestions 129 sit er v 4.3.2 TarskiandefinitionsandTarski’s“theory” 133 ni U 4.3.3 Reductionandphysicalism 138 o d t 4.3.4 Correspondenceanddeflationism 140 se n e c 5 IndefinabilityandInconsistency 144 m - li 5.1 Indefinability 145 o c 5.1.1 Indefinabilitybefore1931 145 ect. n n 5.1.2 TheoremI:textualissues 147 o c e 5.1.3 TheoremIandIntuitionisticFormalism 155 av gr 5.1.4 Axiomaticsemantics 158 al p 5.2 Inconsistencyineverydaylanguage 160 ww. w 5.2.1 InconsistentKotarbin´skianconventions 162 m o 5.2.2 TarskiafterKotarbin´ski 166 al fr eri 6 Transitions:1933–1935 169 at m 6.1 The1935postscript 170 ht g 6.2 Carnaponanalyticityandtruth 174 yri p o 6.3 Theestablishmentofscientificsemantics 179 C 7 LogicalConsequence 181 7.1 Tarski’sdefinition 182 7.1.1 Synopsis 182 7.1.2 ObjectionstoTarski’saccount 185 7.2 ConsequenceinLogicalSyntax 187 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE vi — #6 Contents vii 7.2.1 L-consequenceandconditionF 187 7.2.2 TractarianismintheViennacircle 191 7.3 Theovergenerationproblemanddomainvariation 194 7.3.1 Domainvariation 194 7.3.2 ConsequenceinGödel’scompletenesstheorem 198 7.3.3 Tarski’sfixeddomain 201 7.4 Themodalityproblemand“Tarski’sFallacy” 203 7.4.1 Modalities 204 01 2- 7.4.2 Consequenceandtruth 206 2-0 1 7.4.3 Tarski’s“must” 208 20 7.5 Theformalityproblemandthelogicalconstants 209 ct - e n 7.5.1 Constantandconsequence 209 on C 7.5.2 Anachronisticreadings 211 ve a 7.5.3 Carnaponformality 213 algr 7.5.4 Theω-ruleandGödelsentences 214 y - P e 7.5.5 Antitractarianismandthenatureoflogic 215 dn y 7.6 EvaluatingTarski’saccount 219 of S 7.6.1 Theanalyticproblem 219 sity 7.6.2 Eliminatingtransformationrules 221 ver ni 7.6.3 Epistemicandgeneralityconceptionsoflogic 223 U o d t 8 Conclusion 227 se n 8.1 Paris1935andthereceptionofsemantics 227 ce 8.2 Finalremarks 232 m - li o c Notes 234 ect. n n o Bibliography 249 ec v a gr Index 260 al p w. w w m o al fr eri at m ht g yri p o C 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE vii — #7 Series Editor’s Foreword Duringthefirsthalfofthetwentiethcenturyanalyticphilosophygradu- allyestablisheditselfasthedominanttraditionintheEnglish-speaking world,andoverthelastfewdecadesithastakenfirmrootinmanyother 01 2- partsoftheworld.Therehasbeenincreasingdebateoverjustwhat‘ana- 2-0 1 lyticphilosophy’means,asthemovementhasramifiedintothecomplex 20 tradition that we know today, but the influence of the concerns, ideas ct - e n andmethodsofearlyanalyticphilosophyoncontemporarythoughtis on C indisputable. All this has led to greater self-consciousness among ana- ve a lytic philosophers about the nature and origins of their tradition, and algr P scholarlyinterestinitshistoricaldevelopmentandphilosophicalfoun- y - e dations has blossomed in recent years. The result is that history of dn y analytic philosophy is now recognized as a major field of philosophy of S initsownright. sity Themainaimoftheseriesinwhichthepresentbookappears–thefirst ver ni seriesofitskind–istocreateavenueforworkonthehistoryofanalytic U o philosophy, consolidating the area as a major field of philosophy and d t e s promotingfurtherresearchanddebate. The‘historyofanalyticphilos- n e c ophy’isunderstoodbroadly, ascoveringtheperiodfromthelastthree m - li decadesofthenineteenthcenturytothestartofthetwenty-firstcentury o c – beginning with the work of Frege, Russell, Moore and Wittgenstein, ect. n n who are generally regarded as its main founders, and the influences o c e upon them – and going right up to the most recent developments. In av gr allowingthe‘history’toextendtothepresent, theaimistoencourage al p engagementwithcontemporarydebatesinphilosophy–forexample,in ww. w showinghowtheconcernsofearlyanalyticphilosophyrelatetocurrent m o concerns.Infocusingonanalyticphilosophy,theaimisnottoexclude al fr comparisonswithother–earlierorcontemporary–traditions,orconsid- eri at eration of figures or themes that some might regard as marginal to the m ht analytic tradition but which also throw light on analytic philosophy. yrig Indeed,afurtheraimoftheseriesistodeepenourunderstandingofthe op C broadercontextinwhichanalyticphilosophydeveloped,bylooking,for example,attherootsofanalyticphilosophyinneo-KantianismorBritish idealism, or the connections between analytic philosophy and phe- nomenology,ordiscussingtheworkofphilosopherswhowereimportant in the development of analytic philosophy but who are now often forgotten. viii 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE viii — #8 SeriesEditor’sForeword ix InthisbookDouglasPattersonprovidesthefirstfull-lengthaccountof AlfredTarski’sphilosophy.TarskiwasborninWarsawin1901andgained hisdoctorateinlogicattheUniversityofWarsawin1924,supervisedby StanislawLes´niewski. Inthe1920sand1930shepublishedextensively on logic and set theory, and as a representative of the so-called Lvov– Warsaw School, maintained close links with Gödel, Carnap and other membersoftheViennaCircle.WhenNaziGermanyinvadedPolandon 1 September 1939, Tarski was at a conference in the United States and 01 2- was unable to return home. He stayed there throughout the war years, 2-0 1 teaching at Harvard, New York and Princeton before eventually being 20 given a permanent post at the University of California at Berkeley in ct - e n 1945,whereheremaineduntilhisdeathin1983.Tarskiwasthusoneof on C themanylogiciansandphilosophersfromCentralEuropewhomoved ve a to the United States as a result of the rise of Nazism in Germany, and algr P whosestoryispartofthebroaderstoryofthedevelopmentofanalytic y - e philosophy in North America, as the ideas of the Polish logicians and dn y thelogicalpositiviststookrootinnewsoil. of S Tarski’stwomostfamouspapersare‘TheConceptofTruthinFormal- sity ized Languages’, first published in Polish in 1933 (and in German in ver ni 1935)and‘OntheConceptofLogicalConsequence’,publishedinboth U o Polish and German in 1936. In the first paper Tarski offers a definition d t e s of truth for formal languages by introducing the notion of satisfaction n e c andappealingtotherecursivestructureofformallanguages.Tarskifirst m - li formulates his ‘T-schema’ here (famously exemplified in the statement o c that‘Snowiswhiteistrue’ifandonlyifsnowiswhite),andalsooffers ect. n n asolutiontotheLiarparadoxbyinsistingthattruthforalanguagecan o c e only be defined in a metalanguage. In the second paper Tarski offers av gr a corresponding semantic definition of logical consequence by utiliz- al p ing the idea of truth-under-an-interpretation introduced in his earlier ww. w paper.Thesetwopapershavebeenseenasestablishingthefoundations m o oftruth-conditionalsemantics,withTarskialsoregardedasakeyfigure al fr inthedevelopmentofmodeltheory. eri at As Patterson argues in this book, however, Tarski’s actual views are m ht bothmorecomplexandmoreintriguingthantheyhavestandardlybeen yrig takentobe.Pattersonbeginsbydistinguishingwhathecallsthe‘expres- op C sive’ conception of meaning from the ‘representational’ conception of meaning. On the expressive conception, language expresses thoughts andthenotionsofassertionandjustificationhaveprimacy.Ontherep- resentational conception, language represents things in the world and the notions of reference and truth have primacy. The former finds its naturalhomeintheproof-theoreticconceptionoflogic,whilethelatter 10.1057/9780230367227 - Alfred Tarski: Philosophy of Language and Logic, Douglas Patterson DOUGLAS: “FM” — 2011/11/29 — 17:16 — PAGE ix — #9

Description:
This study looks to the work of Tarski's mentors Stanislaw Lesniewski and Tadeusz Kotarbinski, and reconsiders all of the major issues in Tarski scholarship in light of the conception of Intuitionistic Formalism developed: semantics, truth, paradox, logical consequence.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.