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Ray on Tarski on Logical Consequence
Journal of Philosophical Logic, 1999zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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Erkenntnis, 1993
Hartry Field has argued that Alfred Tarski desired to reduce all semantic concepts to concepts acceptable to physicalism and that Tarski failed to do this. In the two succeeding decades, Field has been charged with being too lenient with Tarski; but it has been almost universally accepted that an objection at least as strong as Field's is telling ...
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Hartry Field has argued that Alfred Tarski desired to reduce all semantic concepts to concepts acceptable to physicalism and that Tarski failed to do this. In the two succeeding decades, Field has been charged with being too lenient with Tarski; but it has been almost universally accepted that an objection at least as strong as Field's is telling ...
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2014
Alfred Tarski (b. 1901–d. 1983) was a Polish–American mathematician, widely regarded as one of the greatest logicians of all time. Tarski’s work has been influential in philosophy, especially through his theories of three concepts of traditional philosophical and, specifically, logical interest: the concepts of truth, of logical consequence, and of a ...
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Alfred Tarski (b. 1901–d. 1983) was a Polish–American mathematician, widely regarded as one of the greatest logicians of all time. Tarski’s work has been influential in philosophy, especially through his theories of three concepts of traditional philosophical and, specifically, logical interest: the concepts of truth, of logical consequence, and of a ...
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2003
Abstract Alfred Tarski first met Kurt Gödel on the occasion of his visit to Vienna early in 1930, at the invitation of Karl Menger. Their subsequent contact, both personal and by mail, which begins with a letter to Tarski from Gödel in 1931, extended at least to 1970; the relationship between them over this entire period is traced in S ...
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Abstract Alfred Tarski first met Kurt Gödel on the occasion of his visit to Vienna early in 1930, at the invitation of Karl Menger. Their subsequent contact, both personal and by mail, which begins with a letter to Tarski from Gödel in 1931, extended at least to 1970; the relationship between them over this entire period is traced in S ...
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1995
Let me start with the following quotation from Mostowski: Tarski, in oral discussions, has often indicated his sympathies with nominalism. While he never accepted the ‘reism’ of Tadeusz Kotarbinski, he was certainly attracted to it in the early phase of his work. However, the set-theoretical methods that form the basis of his logical and mathematical
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Let me start with the following quotation from Mostowski: Tarski, in oral discussions, has often indicated his sympathies with nominalism. While he never accepted the ‘reism’ of Tadeusz Kotarbinski, he was certainly attracted to it in the early phase of his work. However, the set-theoretical methods that form the basis of his logical and mathematical
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Topological duality for Tarski algebras
Algebra Universalis, 2007Sergio A Celani, Leonardo Cabrer
exaly

