•  51
    Autologic
    Edinburgh University Press. 1992.
    Shows how to program on a computer (in Prolog) the effective skills taught in introductory and intermediate logic courses. The topics include the relevance of relevance, representing formulae and proofs, avoiding loops and blind alleys, and other aspects. Of interest to computational logicians, proof-theorists, cognitive scientists, and workers in artificial intelligence. Distributed by Columbia U. Press. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
  •  274
    Victor vanquished
    Analysis 62 (2): 135-142. 2002.
    The naive anti-realist holds the following principle: (◊K) All truths are knowable. This unrestricted generalization (◊K), as is now well known, falls prey to Fitch’s Paradox (Fitch 1963: 38, Theorem 1). It can be used as the only suspect principle, alongside others that cannot be impugned, to prove quite generally, and constructively, that the set {p, ¬Kp} is inconsistent (Tennant 1997: 261). From this it would follow, intuitionistically, that any proposition that is never actually known to be …Read more
  •  180
    Peter Milne (2007) poses two challenges to the inferential theorist of meaning. This study responds to both. First, it argues that the method of natural deduction idealizes the essential details of correct informal deductive reasoning. Secondly, it explains how rules of inference in free logic can determine unique senses for the existential quantifier and the identity predicate. The final part of the investigation brings out an underlying order in a basic family of free logics
  •  64
    Language in Focus: Foundations, Methods and Systems
    with Asa Kasher
    Philosophical Quarterly 27 (106): 85. 1977.
  •  124
    Evolutionary v. Evolved Ethics
    Philosophy 58 (225). 1983.
    Kant writes: If … the only aim of Nature regarding some creature possessed of reason and a will were its preservation, its well-being, in a word its happiness, then she would have come to a very bad arrangement in choosing its reason as executor of that aim. For all actions that it had to execute in this her intention, and the whole regulation of its behaviour would have been able to be prescribed to it much more precisely by instinct, and that aim thereby much more certainly maintained, than ev…Read more
  •  107
    We present a logically detailed case-study of Darwinian evolutionary explanation. Special features of Darwin’s explanatory schema made it an unusual theoretical breakthrough, from the point of view of the philosophy of science. The schema employs no theoretical terms, and puts forward no theoretical hypotheses. Instead, it uses three observational generalizations—Variability, Heritability and Differential Reproduction—along with an innocuous assumption of Causal Efficacy, to derive Adaptive Evol…Read more
  •  178
    Review of PENELOPE MADDY. Naturalism in Mathematics. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997
  •  33
    Simplicity
    Philosophical Books 18 (1): 43-45. 1977.
  •  144
    This paper addresses an objection raised by Timothy Williamson to the ‘restriction strategy’ that I proposed, in The Taming of The True, in order to deal with the Fitch paradox. Williamson provides a new version of a Fitch-style argument that purports to show that even the restricted principle of knowability suffers the same fate as the unrestricted one. I show here that the new argument is fallacious. The source of the fallacy is a misunderstanding of the condition used in stating the restricte…Read more
  •  124
    Paradoxes of pure curiosity
    Theory and Decision 38 (3): 321-330. 1995.
    We consider how a rational decision theorist would justify committing resources to an investigation designed to satisfy pure curiosity. We derive a strange result about the need to be completely open-minded about the outcome
  •  36
    Review of K. Devlin, Logic and Information (review)
    Philosophia Mathematica 3 (2). 1995.
  •  85
    Formal games and forms for games
    Linguistics and Philosophy 4 (2). 1980.
  •  71
    On having bad contractions, or: no room for recovery
    Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 7 (1-2): 241-266. 1997.
    ABSTRACT The well-known AGM-theory-contraction and theory-revision, due to Alchourrón, Gärdenfors and Makinson, relies heavily on the so-called postulate of recovery. This postulate is supposed to capture the requirement of “minimum mutilation”; but it does not. Recovery can be satisfied even when there is more mutilation than is necessary. Recovery also ensures that very often too little is given up in a contraction, in this paper I bring out clearly the deficiencies of the AGM-theory in these …Read more
  •  168
    In his book Bayes or Bust?, John Earman (1992: 63–65) seeks to set out the Bayesian reasoning that would vindicate the pre-theoretic intuition that a theory receives confirmation from having its observational predictions borne out by experience.
  •  164
    Williamson’s Woes
    Synthese 173 (1): 9-23. 2010.
    This is a reply to Timothy Williamson ’s paper ‘Tennant’s Troubles’. It defends against Williamson ’s objections the anti-realist’s knowability principle based on the author’s ‘local’ restriction strategy involving Cartesian propositions, set out in The Taming of the True. Williamson ’s purported Fitchian reductio, involving the unknown number of books on his table, is analyzed in detail and shown to be fallacious. Williamson ’s attempt to cause problems for the anti-realist by means of a suppos…Read more
  •  236
    Mind, Mathematics and the I gnorabimusstreit
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 15 (4). 2007.
    1Certain developments in recent philosophy of mind that contemporary philosophers would regard as both novel and important were fully anticipated by writers in (or reacting to) the tradition of Nat...
  •  105
    The Relevance of Premises to Conclusions of Core Proofs
    Review of Symbolic Logic 8 (4): 743-784. 2015.
    The rules for Core Logic are stated, and various important results about the system are summarized. We describe its relationship to other systems, such as Classical Logic, Intuitionistic Logic, Minimal Logic, and the Anderson–Belnap relevance logicR. A precise, positive explication is offered of what it is for the premises of a proof to connect relevantly with its conclusion. This characterization exploits the notion of positive and negative occurrences of atoms in sentences. It is shown that al…Read more
  •  535
    Discussion. Changing the theory of theory change: reply to my critics
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (4): 569-586. 1997.
    ‘Changing the Theory of Theory Change: Towards a Computational Approach’ (Tennant [1994]; henceforth CTTC) claimed that the AGM postulate of recovery is false, and that AGM contractions of theories can be more than minimally mutilating. It also described an alternative, computational method for contracting theories, called the Staining Algorithm. Makinson [1995] and Hansson and Rott [1995] criticized CTTC's arguments against AGM-theory, and its specific proposals for an alternative, computationa…Read more
  •  135
    Logicism and Neologicism
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2013.
  •  287
    A Defence of Arbitrary Objects
    with Kit Fine
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 57 (1). 1983.
  •  264
    The Full Price of Truth
    Analysis 58 (3): 221-228. 1998.
    Some ideas gain currency as soon as there is a linguistic medium of exchange. Truth is one such. Its role in our intellectual economy is much like that of money in the real one. Canonical warrants to make assertions are like gold bars. Truth-claims are like paper money: promises to produce gold bars on demand.
  •  78
    Conventional Necessity and the Contingency of Convention
    Dialectica 41 (1‐2): 79-95. 1987.
    SummaryI defend a conventionalist view of logical and mathematical truths against the criticisms of Quine and Stroud. Conventionalism is best formulated by appealing to sense‐conferring rules governing important logical and mathematical expressions. Conventional necessity can be understood as arising from these rules in a way that is immune to Quine's and Stroud's criticisms of the earlier formulation of conventionalism, in which stress was incorrectly laid on axiomatic systems of logic.RésuméJe…Read more
  •  1
    Written for any readers interested in better harnessing philosophy’s real value, this book covers a broad range of fundamental philosophical problems and certain intellectual techniques for addressing those problems. In Introducing Philosophy: God, Mind, World, and Logic , Neil Tennant helps any student in pursuit of a ‘big picture’ to think independently, question received dogma, and analyse problems incisively. It also connects philosophy to other areas of study at the university, enabling all…Read more
  •  140
    Review: From Logic to Philosophies (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (3). 1981.
  •  179
    Peter G¨ ardenfors proved a theorem purporting to show that it is impossible to adjoin to the AGM -postulates for belief-revision a principle of monotonicity for revisions. The principle of monotonicity in question is implied by the Ramsey test for conditionals. So G¨
  •  50
    How is meaning possible?
    Philosophical Books 26 (2): 65-82. 1985.
  •  100
    Proof and Paradox
    Dialectica 36 (2‐3): 265-296. 1982.