•  18
    The Realm of Reason (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 102 (3): 155-162. 2005.
  •  5
    Entailment and Proofs
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79. 1979.
    N. Tennant; XI*—Entailment and Proofs, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 79, Issue 1, 1 June 1979, Pages 167–190, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristote.
  •  126
    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...
  •  19
  •  14
    The Full Price of Truth
    Analysis 58 (3): 221-228. 1998.
  •  80
    Logicism and Neologicism
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2013.
  •  12
    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
  •  59
    Recursive Semantics For Knowledge and Belief
    The Monist 60 (3): 419-430. 1977.
    1. This paper is an informal exposition of a model-theoretic semantics for knowledge and belief set out in full detail else where. Considerations of space and simplicity prevent any recapitulation of tracts of formal definitions. My aim is simply to inform the reader of the alleged existence of one “new direction” in semantics, and to direct him to the original source for its detailed development. I shall explain certain self-imposed limitations on the scope and adequacy conditions of this treat…Read more
  •  70
    I clarify how the requirement of conservative extension features in the thinking of various deflationists, and how this relates to another litmus claim, that the truth-predicate stands for a real, substantial property. I discuss how the deflationist can accommodate the result, to which Cieslinski draws attention, that non-conservativeness attends even the generalization that all logical theorems in the language of arithmetic are true. Finally I provide a four-fold categorization of various forms…Read more
  •  9
    XI*—Entailment and Proofs
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79 (1): 167-190. 1979.
    N. Tennant; XI*—Entailment and Proofs, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 79, Issue 1, 1 June 1979, Pages 167–190, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristote.
  • 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
  •  21
  •  32
    An account of how a rational agent should revise beliefs in the light of new evidence.
  •  11
    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
  •  18
  •  147
    Victor vanquished
    Analysis 62 (2). 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
  •  68
    Frege's content-principle and relevant deducibility
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 32 (3): 245-258. 2003.
    Given the harmony principle for logical operators, compositionality ought to ensure that harmony should obtain at the level of whole contents. That is, the role of a content qua premise ought to be balanced exactly by its role as a conclusion. Frege's contextual definition of propositional content happens to exploit this balance, and one appeals to the Cut rule to show that the definition is adequate. We show here that Frege's definition remains adequate even when one relevantizes logic by aband…Read more
  •  14
    Naturalism in Mathematics (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (4): 351-352. 2003.
  •  53
    Critical Studies / Book Reviews (review)
    Philosophia Mathematica 6 (1): 90-90. 1998.
    The over-arching theme is that we can redeem Frege's key philosophical insights concerning (natural and real) numbers and our knowledge of them, despite Russell's famous discovery of paradox in Frege's own theory of classes. That paradox notwithstanding, numbers are still logical objects, in some sense created or generated by methods or principles of abstraction— which of course cannot be as ambitious as Frege's Basic Law U. These principles not only bring numbers into existence, as it we…Read more
  •  61
    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
  •  72
    Logic, Mathematics, and the A Priori, Part I: A Problem for Realism
    Philosophia Mathematica 22 (3): 308-320. 2014.
    This is Part I of a two-part study of the foundations of mathematics through the lenses of (i) apriority and analyticity, and (ii) the resources supplied by Core Logic. Here we explain what is meant by apriority, as the notion applies to knowledge and possibly also to truths in general. We distinguish grounds for knowledge from grounds of truth, in light of our recent work on truthmakers. We then examine the role of apriority in the realism/anti-realism debate. We raise a hitherto unnoticed prob…Read more
  •  91
    A general theory of abstraction operators
    Philosophical Quarterly 54 (214): 105-133. 2004.
    I present a general theory of abstraction operators which treats them as variable-binding term- forming operators, and provides a reasonably uniform treatment for definite descriptions, set abstracts, natural number abstraction, and real number abstraction. This minimizing, extensional and relational theory reveals a striking similarity between definite descriptions and set abstracts, and provides a clear rationale for the claim that there is a logic of sets (which is ontologically non- committa…Read more
  •  16
    Peacocke argues for a ‘generalized rationalism’, holding that ‘all entitlement has a fundamentally a priori component.’ (2) But his rationalism ‘differs from those of Frege and Gödel, just as theirs differ from that of Leibniz.’ He requires both substantive theories of intentional content and of understanding, and systematic formal theories of referential semantics and truth. We need an externalist theory of content: ‘Only mental states with externally individuated contents can make judgements a…Read more
  •  107
    Is This a Proof I See before Me?
    Analysis 41 (3). 1980.
  •  42
    Rule-Irredundancy and the Sequent Calculus for Core Logic
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 57 (1): 105-125. 2016.
    We explore the consequences, for logical system-building, of taking seriously the aim of having irredundant rules of inference, and a preference for proofs of stronger results over proofs of weaker ones. This leads one to reconsider the structural rules of REFLEXIVITY, THINNING, and CUT. REFLEXIVITY survives in the minimally necessary form $\varphi:\varphi$. Proofs have to get started. CUT is subject to a CUT-elimination theorem, to the effect that one can always make do without applications of …Read more
  •  347
    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, computational…Read more