Philosophy of mathematics

Philosophy of logic

Philosophy of logic is the area of philosophy that studies the scope and nature of logic. It investigates the philosophical problems raised by logic, such as the presuppositions often implicitly at work in theories of logic and in their application. This involves questions about how logic is to be defined and how different logical systems are connected to each other. It includes the study of the nature of the fundamental concepts used by logic and the relation of logic to other disciplines. According to a common characterization, philosophical logic is the part of the philosophy of logic that studies the application of logical methods to philosophical problems, often in the form of extended logical systems like modal logic. But other theorists draw the distinction between the philosophy of logic and philosophical logic differently or not at all. Metalogic is closely related to the philosophy of logic as the discipline investigating the properties of formal logical systems, like consistency and completeness. Various characterizations of the are found in the academic literature. Logic is often seen as the study of the laws of thought, correct reasoning, valid inference, or logical truth. It is a formal science that investigates how conclusions follow from premises in a topic-neutral manner, i.e. independent of the specific subject matter discussed. One form of inquiring into the nature of logic focuses on the commonalities between various logical formal systems and on how they differ from non-logical formal systems. Important considerations in this respect are whether the formal system in question is compatible with fundamental logical intuitions and whether it is complete. Different conceptions of logic can be distinguished according to whether they define logic as the study of valid inference or logical truth. A further distinction among conceptions of logic is based on whether the criteria of valid inference and logical truth are specified in terms of syntax or semantics. Different are often distinguished. Logic is usually understood as formal logic and is treated as such for most of this article. Formal logic is only interested in the form of arguments, expressed in a formal language, and focuses on deductive inferences. Informal logic, on the other hand, addresses a much wider range of arguments found also in natural language, which include non-deductive arguments. The correctness of arguments may depend on other factors than their form, like their content or their context. Various logical formal systems or logics have been developed in the 20th century and it is the task of the philosophy of logic to classify them, to show how they are related to each other, and to address the problem of how there can be a manifold of logics in contrast to one universally true logic. These logics can be divided into classical logic, usually identified with first-order logic, extended logics, and deviant logics. Extended logics accept the basic formalism and the axioms of classical logic but extend them with new logical vocabulary. Deviant logics, on the other hand, reject certain core assumptions of classical logic and are therefore incompatible with it. The philosophy of logic also investigates the nature and philosophical implications of the . This includes the problem of truth, especially of logical truth, which may be defined as truth depending only on the meanings of the logical terms used. Another question concerns the nature of premises and conclusions, i.e. whether to understand them as thoughts, propositions, or sentences, and how they are composed of simpler constituents. Together, premises and a conclusion constitute an inference, which can be either deductive and ampliative depending on whether it is necessarily truth-preserving or introduces new and possibly false information. A central concern in logic is whether a deductive inference is valid or not. Validity is often defined in terms of necessity, i.e. an inference is valid if and only if it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion to be false. Incorrect inferences and arguments, on the other hand, fail to support their conclusion. They can be categorized as formal or informal fallacies depending on whether they belong to formal or informal logic. Logic has mostly been concerned with definitory rules, i.e. with the question of which rules of inference determine whether an argument is valid or not. A separate topic of inquiry concerns the strategic rules of logic: the rules governing how to reach an intended conclusion given a certain set of premises, i.e. which inferences need to be drawn to arrive there. The is concerned with the metaphysical status of the laws and objects of logic. An important dispute in this field is between realists, who hold that logic is based on facts that have mind-independent existence, and anti-realists like conventionalists, who hold that the laws of logic are based on the conventions governing the use of language. Logic is closely related to . A central issue in regard to ontology concerns the ontological commitments associated with the use of logic, for example, with singular terms and existential quantifiers. An important question in mathematics is whether all mathematical truths can be grounded in the axioms of logic together with set theory. Other related fields include computer science and psychology. (Wikipedia).

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Logic: The Structure of Reason

As a tool for characterizing rational thought, logic cuts across many philosophical disciplines and lies at the core of mathematics and computer science. Drawing on Aristotle’s Organon, Russell’s Principia Mathematica, and other central works, this program tracks the evolution of logic, be

From playlist Logic & Philosophy of Mathematics

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The History of Logic: The Logic of Aristotle

A few clips of Gabriele Giannantoni explaining Aristotelian logic, the logic of Aristotle. These clips come from the Multimedia Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences. More Short Videos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhP9EhPApKE8v8UVlc7JuuNHwvhkaOvzc Aristotle's Logic: https:

From playlist Logic & Philosophy of Mathematics

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Introduction to Philosophy and Logic

Humans are on a quest to understand the world around us. How did this quest begin? What are the tools we use to gather knowledge? How do we know what is possible to know? What do we mean when using words like ethics, ontology, metaphysics, aesthetics, and logic? This series is going to get

From playlist Philosophy/Logic

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Teach Astronomy - Logic

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The Logic of Aristotle

Gabriele Giannantoni explains the logic of Aristotle in the context of the history of logic in interview from 1990. These clips are from the Multimedia Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences. The translation is my own. #Philosophy #Aristotle

From playlist Aristotle

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Philosophy of Mathematics & Frege (Dummett 1994)

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From playlist Logic & Philosophy of Mathematics

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Logic - Types of Statements

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A brief history of logic: Stoics and other thinkers | MathFoundations 252 | NJ Wildberger

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A talk given by Cora Diamond in 2017 at St. John's College. 00:00 Wittgenstein as a Responsive Philosopher 04:18 Wittgenstein reads Russell 13:24 Wittgenstein & the Spirit of Modernity 20:05 What Next? The Tractatus 30:20 Flaws in the Tractatus 34:23 Wittgenstein’s Diagnosis 41:39 O

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Robert Pippin - Radical Finitude in the Anti-Idealist Modern European Philosophical Tradition”

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Medieval Philosophy - Bryan Magee & Anthony Kenny (1987)

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From playlist Bryan Magee Interviews - The Great Philosophers (1987)

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Logical Positivism & its Legacy - A. J. Ayer & Bryan Magee (1978)

In this program, A. J. Ayer discusses logical positivism with Bryan Magee. This is from a 1978 series on Modern Philosophy called Men of Ideas. You can find Ayer's famous book, "Language, Truth, & Logic", here: https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.189736/page/n32/mode/1up #Philos

From playlist Bryan Magee Interviews - Modern Philosophy: Men of Ideas (1977-1978)

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Frege, Russell, & Modern Logic - A. J. Ayer & Bryan Magee (1987)

In this program, A. J. Ayer discusses the work of Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, and modern logic with Bryan Magee. This is from the 1987 series on great philosophers. #Philosophy #Bryanmagee #BertrandRussell

From playlist Bryan Magee Interviews - The Great Philosophers (1987)

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Wittgenstein - The Subliming of the Object of Philosophical Investigation

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Mod-05 Lec-15 The Nyaya Philosophy - I

Indian Philosophy by Dr. Satya Sundar Sethy, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Madras. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

From playlist IIT Madras: Introduction to Indian Philosophy | CosmoLearning.org Philosophy

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Wittgenstein's Games (A. C. Grayling)

Professor A. C. Grayling discusses the thought of Ludwig Wittgenstein and the intellectual context surrounding his life and work. Note, the audio has been slightly improved. I increased the volume and tried to reduce some of the cell phone interference that occasionally shows up. In any ca

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The Fact/Value Dichotomy & its Critics - Hilary Putnam (2007)

Professor Hilary Putnam gives the UCD Ulysses Medal Lecture titled "The Fact/Value Dichotomy and its critics" at UCD on 5th March 2007. Hilary Putnam (1926-2016) was an American philosopher, mathematician, and computer scientist who was a central figure in analytic philosophy. He made imp

From playlist Social & Political Philosophy

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What Distinguishes a Person from a Word? The Thought of C. S. Peirce

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