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This volume gathers selected papers presented at the Fourth Asian Workshop on Philosophical Logic, held in Beijing in October 2018. The contributions cover a wide variety of topics in modal logic (epistemic logic, temporal logic and dynamic logic), proof theory, algebraic logic, game logics, and philosophical foundations of logic.
This volume collects selected papers presented at the Second Chinese Conference on Logic and Argumentation in 2018 held in Hangzhou, China. It continues discussions on the interplay between logic and argumentation which has a long history from Aristotle's ancient logic to very recent formal argumentation in AI.
Preface.- Paracomplete truth theory with a definable hierarchy of determinateness operators.-Paradoxes behind the Solovay sentences.- Multiple Roles and Deontic Logic.- EEG Evidence for Game-Theoretic Model to Ambiguous Pronoun Resolution.- On the Factivity Problem of Epistemic Contextualism.- Dynamic Epistemic Logic of Faith Diffusion in Cultural Circles.- Monotonic Opaqueness in Deontic Contexts.- Towards a Relational Treating of Language and Logical Systems.- Modal Logic and Planarity of Graphs.- Proof-theoretic Results of Common Sense Modal Predicate Calculi.- Strengthened Conditionals.- Intentionality as Disposition.
This volume collects selected papers presented at the Second Chinese Conference on Logic and Argumentation in 2018 held in Hangzhou, China. It continues discussions on the interplay between logic and argumentation which has a long history from Aristotle's ancient logic to very recent formal argumentation in AI.
This book brings together a wide range of innovative reflections on the pivotal role that Davidson's concept of agency plays in his later philosophy and its impact on his epistemology, his philosophy of language and mind, and his philosophy of values.
This volume gathers selected papers presented at the Fourth Asian Workshop on Philosophical Logic, held in Beijing in October 2018. The contributions cover a wide variety of topics in modal logic (epistemic logic, temporal logic and dynamic logic), proof theory, algebraic logic, game logics, and philosophical foundations of logic.
This book brings together a wide range of innovative reflections on the pivotal role that Davidson's concept of agency plays in his later philosophy and its impact on his epistemology, his philosophy of language and mind, and his philosophy of values. The authors critically assess central elements of Davidson's program and offer reappraisals of his seminal contributions to, and his continuing influence on, the development of contemporary philosophy. By focusing on agency, the book reveals Davidson's views to have been more dynamic and less reductive than previously acknowledged - pointing toward important new possibilities not only in the theory of knowledge, but also in the philosophy of mind.It is a valuable resource both for experts on Davidson's philosophy and for those interested in central topics in the theory of action, the philosophy of mind and language, epistemology, moral philosophy, and the philosophy of values. It is also of interest to researchers in adjoining disciplines, such as cognitive science, linguistics, and psychology.
The book you have just opened is probably unlike anything you have ever read so far. It offers you a path to direct contact with ¿The Art of War¿, the masterpiece of Sun Tzu, a classical theorist of warfare in Ancient China. This book examines an ancient Chinese work on strategy and warfare: Sun Tzu, ¿The Art of War¿, from the perspectives of logic, mathematics, and computer science. Sun Tzüs book has been studied and translated many times before, with viewpoints from historians, military- and business strategists, philosophers, and in the context of modern computer strategy games. This book takes a new approach to study this 2500-year-old text. It uses modern mind mapping techniques to show a new dimension that uncovers meaning and structure not easily seen before. Mind maps are semantic diagrams of related concepts: they are used in this book in a restricted form, defined as Text Tree Mind Maps. A chapter covering the theoretical side of diagramming ancient text, explains the making of the mind maps used in this book and why showing old text in this way is so useful.
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