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普利斯特讲学日程

作者:文章来源:现代逻辑与逻辑应用研究所点击数:20更新时间:2011-12-22

Logic and Philosophy

 

Nanjing University ,Winter 2011/12

 

 

The aim of this course is to get you to understand some of the basic ideas of non-classical logic, their relevance to various issue in philosophy, and to engage with some of these issues in the light of the logical techniques.  We will be using (parts of) my book Introduction to Non-Classical Logic: from If to Is (Cambridge University Press, 2008). You should possess a copy of this, and bring it with you to class. You should prepare yourself for the course by working through chapters 1 and 12.

There will be 10 3-hour sessions,  2pm-5pm every day, place to be announced. The sessions will be part lecture, part discussion, and part problems class. I will set exercises every session, and you are expected to have attempted these before the next session. The exact topics covered are flexible to a certain extent, and can be determined in part of participant-interests. However, the provisional programme is as follows. The section references are to Introduction to Non-Classical Logic.

 

Introduction

Session 1, December 29. Review of classical logic, the material conditional and the existential quantifier. (1.1-1.10, 12.1-12.7)

Conditionals

Session 2, December 30. Modal logic and the strict conditional. (2.1-2.8, 3.1-3.6, 4.5-4.9)

Session 3, January 3. Conditional logic. (5.1-5.5, and maybe 5.6-5.8)

Session 4, January 4. Intuitionist logic and its conditional. (6.1-6.6)

Session 5, January 5. Many-valued logics and their conditionals. (7.1-7.10)

Session 6, January 7. Relevant logic. (8.1-8.6, 10.1-10.4)

Session 7, January 9. Fuzzy logic, and modus ponens. (11.1-11.6)

Existence

Session 8, January 9.  Free logic. (13.1-13.5)

Session 9, January 11. Quantified modal logic. (14.1-14.5, 15.1-15.4)

Session 10 January 12. Existence in intuitionistic logic and many-valued logics. (20.1-20.6, 21.1-21.7)

 

Graham Priest

New York, December 2011