Open Access
2012 The Logic of Finite Order
Simon Hewitt
Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 53(3): 297-318 (2012). DOI: 10.1215/00294527-1716820

Abstract

This paper develops a formal system, consisting of a language and semantics, called serial logic (SL). In rough outline, SL permits quantification over, and reference to, some finite number of things in an order, in an ordinary everyday sense of the word “order,” and superplural quantification over things thus ordered. Before we discuss SL itself, some mention should be made of an issue in philosophical logic which provides the background to the development of SL, and with respect to which I wish to contend that the system permits progress.

Citation

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Simon Hewitt. "The Logic of Finite Order." Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 53 (3) 297 - 318, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1215/00294527-1716820

Information

Published: 2012
First available in Project Euclid: 24 September 2012

zbMATH: 1272.03023
MathSciNet: MR2981010
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1215/00294527-1716820

Subjects:
Primary: 03A05
Secondary: 00A30

Keywords: Boolos , plural logic , plural quantification , second-order logic

Rights: Copyright © 2012 University of Notre Dame

Vol.53 • No. 3 • 2012
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