Termos a serem pesquisados:
Grundy Functions (combinatorial game theory): Site 1
Games of Skill (ver Decision making using game theory - Kelly, Anthony, 1957-)
Artigos
A grande maioria destes artigos está no DVD dados e biblioteca.- John Phillips. Two Theories of Fictional Discourse: Link
- Steven D. Hales. The Problem of Intuition: Link
- A Logic for Information Systems
Source: Studia Logica: An International Journal for Symbolic Logic, Vol. 58, No. 1, Reasoning
with Incomplete Information (Jan., 1997), pp. 3-16
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20015890
Abstract: A conception of an information system has been introduced by Pawlak. The study has been continued in works of Pawlak and Orlowska and in works of Vakarelov. They had proposed some basic relations and had constructed a formal system of a modal logic that describes the relations and some of their Boolean combinations. Our work is devoted to a generalization of this approach. A class of relation systems and a complete calculus construction method for these systems are proposed. As a corollary of our main result, our paper contains a solution of a Vakarelov's problem: how to construct a formal system that describes all the Boolean combinations of the basic relations. Key words: modal logic, information system, complete calculus.
Source: Crítica: Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosofía, Vol. 38, No. 112 (Apr., 2006), pp. 69-79
Published by: Instituto de Investigaciones Filosóficas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de
México
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40104967
1 . What Literal Meaning Is About
Literal Meaning is devoted to a foundational debate in the philosophy of language: the debate between Literalism and Contextualism. According to Literalism, sentences represent the world as being thus and so and are true or false depending on how the word actually is. The task of semantics is to assign truth-conditions to sentences in a compositional fashion. According to Contextualism, this project rests on a category mistake. Natural language sentences per se don't have truth-conditions, they only have conventional meanings in virtue of which they can be used to say things that are true or false. What has content primarily is the speech act (or the thought act) and only derivatively the sentence used in performing the speech act.
Source: Erkenntnis (1975-), Vol. 62, No. 1 (Jan., 2005), pp. 29-46
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20013311
Colin Radford raises the question of our emotional responses to fiction in his paper 'How can we be moved by the fate of Anna Karenina?'1 When we read a novel or watch a movie, we have emotional responses towards characters or situations portrayed. We sob, sweat, gasp, scream, smile, and laugh. We fear Darth Vader, we feel anger toward lago, and we are amused by the characters of South Park. These responses seem so natural. But Radford claims that there is something incoherent about them. How can we have them when we know that those characters are not real and those situations are just fictional?
Source: Erkenntnis (1975-), Vol. 63, No. 3, Coherence, Truth and Testimony (2005), pp. 317-333
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20013367
A defence of informational structural realism. Luciano Floridi
Appropriateness measures: an uncertainty model for vague concepts. Jonathan Lawry
Answer Sets and Qualitative Decision Making
Author(s): Gerhard Brewka
Source: Synthese, Vol. 146, No. 1/2, Non-Monotonic and Uncertain Reasoning in Cognition
(Aug., 2005), pp. 171-187
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20118623
- Predelli and García-Carpintero on "Literal Meaning" (Predelli y García-Carpintero sobre Literal Meaning)
Source: Crítica: Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosofía, Vol. 38, No. 112 (Apr., 2006), pp. 69-79
Published by: Instituto de Investigaciones Filosóficas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de
México
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40104967
1 . What Literal Meaning Is About
Literal Meaning is devoted to a foundational debate in the philosophy of language: the debate between Literalism and Contextualism. According to Literalism, sentences represent the world as being thus and so and are true or false depending on how the word actually is. The task of semantics is to assign truth-conditions to sentences in a compositional fashion. According to Contextualism, this project rests on a category mistake. Natural language sentences per se don't have truth-conditions, they only have conventional meanings in virtue of which they can be used to say things that are true or false. What has content primarily is the speech act (or the thought act) and only derivatively the sentence used in performing the speech act.
- The Real Puzzle from Radford
Source: Erkenntnis (1975-), Vol. 62, No. 1 (Jan., 2005), pp. 29-46
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20013311
Colin Radford raises the question of our emotional responses to fiction in his paper 'How can we be moved by the fate of Anna Karenina?'1 When we read a novel or watch a movie, we have emotional responses towards characters or situations portrayed. We sob, sweat, gasp, scream, smile, and laugh. We fear Darth Vader, we feel anger toward lago, and we are amused by the characters of South Park. These responses seem so natural. But Radford claims that there is something incoherent about them. How can we have them when we know that those characters are not real and those situations are just fictional?
- The Role of Coherence of Evidence in the Non-Dynamic Model of Confirmation
Source: Erkenntnis (1975-), Vol. 63, No. 3, Coherence, Truth and Testimony (2005), pp. 317-333
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20013367
A defence of informational structural realism. Luciano Floridi
Appropriateness measures: an uncertainty model for vague concepts. Jonathan Lawry
Answer Sets and Qualitative Decision Making
Author(s): Gerhard Brewka
Source: Synthese, Vol. 146, No. 1/2, Non-Monotonic and Uncertain Reasoning in Cognition
(Aug., 2005), pp. 171-187
Published by: Springer
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20118623
Livros
- Giuseppi Primiero. Information and Knowledge: A construtive type theoretic approach. Logic, Epistemology and the Unity of Science. Vol. 10. Springer. 2008
- The Logic Foundation of Probability (R. Carnap): Site
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