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2Review of Patrice Bailhace: Les normes dans le temps et sur l'action (review)Theoria 52 (3): 200. 1986.
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229The fallacies of the new theory of referenceSynthese 104 (2). 1995.The so-called New Theory of Reference (Marcus, Kripke etc.) is inspired by the insight that in modal and intensional contexts quantifiers presuppose nondescriptive unanalyzable identity criteria which do not reduce to any descriptive conditions. From this valid insight the New Theorists fallaciously move to the idea that free singular terms can exhibit a built-in direct reference and that there is even a special class of singular terms (proper names) necessarily exhibiting direct reference. This…Read more
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124On the logic of informational independence and its applicationsJournal of Philosophical Logic 22 (1). 1993.We shall introduce in this paper a language whose formulas will be interpreted by games of imperfect information. Such games will be defined in the same way as the games for first-order formulas except that the players do not have complete information of the earlier course of the game. Some simple logical properties of these games will be stated together with the relation of such games of imperfect information to higher-order logic. Finally, a set of applications will be outlined
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75Independendly‐Friendly Logic: Dependence and Independence of Quantifiers in LogicPhilosophy Compass 7 (10): 691-711. 2012.Independence‐Friendly logic (IF‐logic) introduced by Hintikka and Sandu (1989) studies patterns of dependence and independence of quantifiers which exceed those found in ordinary first‐order logic. The present survey focuses on the game‐theoretical interpretation of IF‐logic, including connections to solution concepts (equilibria in mixed strategies) in classical game theory, but we shall also present its compositional interpretation together with its connections to notions of dependence and dep…Read more
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Dynamic game semanticsIn Jaroslav Peregrin (ed.), Meaning: the dynamic turn, Elsevier Science. pp. 215--240. 2003.
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11entities in mathematics There is a line of argument which keeps ontological commitments to the minimum by making use of conservativity results. The argument goes back to Hilbert who set its general frame. Hilbert’s concern was with certain abstract (ideal) entities in mathematics but the argument has been applied without discrimination to avoid ontological commitment to mathematical entities in physics (Field) or to avoid an ontological commitment to substantial properties in the case of truth (…Read more
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168Partially interpreted relations and partially interpreted quantifiersJournal of Philosophical Logic 27 (6): 587-601. 1998.Logics in which a relation R is semantically incomplete in a particular universe E, i.e. the union of the extension of R with its anti-extension does not exhaust the whole universe E, have been studied quite extensively in the last years. (Cf. van Benthem (1985), Blamey (1986), and Langholm (1988), for partial predicate logic; Muskens (1996), for the applications of partial predicates to formal semantics, and Doherty (1996) for applications to modal logic.) This is not so with semantically incom…Read more
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43Partially ordered connectives and finite graphsIn Michał Krynicki, Marcin Mostowski & Lesław W. Szczerba (eds.), Quantifiers: Logics, Models and Computation: Volume Two: Contributions, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 79--88. 1995.
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103Minimalism and the Definability of TruthThe Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 6 143-153. 2000.In this paper I am going to inquire to what extent the main requirements of a minimalist theory of truth and falsity (as formulated, for example, by Horwich and Field) can be consistently implemented in a formal theory. I will discuss several of the existing logical theories of truth, including Tarski-type (un)definability results, Kripke’s partial interpretation of truth and falsity, Barwise and Moss’ theory based upon non-well-founded sets, McGee’s treatment of truth as a vague predicate, and …Read more
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IF first-order logic and truth-definitionsJournal of Philosophical Logic 26. 1997.This paper shows that the logic known as Information-friendly logic (IF-logic) introduced by Jaakko Hintikka and Gabriel Sandu defines its own truth-predicate. The result is interesting given that IF logic is a much stronger logic than ordinary first-order logic and has also a well behaved notion of negation which, on its first-order subfragment, behaves like classical, contradictory negation.
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494What is Logic?In Dale Jacquette (ed.), Philosophy of Logic, North Holland. pp. 13--39. 2002.It is far from clear what is meant by logic or what should be meant by it. It is nevertheless reasonable to identify logic as the study of inferences and inferential relations. The obvious practical use of logic is in any case to help us to reason well, to draw good inferences. And the typical form the theory of any part of logic seems to be a set of rules of inference. This answer already introduces some structure into a discussion of the nature of logic, for in an inference we can distinguish …Read more
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58Tarski’s Guilty Secret: CompositionalityVienna Circle Institute Yearbook 6 217-230. 1999.Tarski has exerted enormous influence not only on the development of mathematical logic, but on twentieth-century philosophy and philosophical analysis. This influence has been twofold, with the two components pulling in a sense in opposite directions. A comparison with the influence of the Vienna Circle provides an instructive vantage point in viewing Tarski’s influence. On the one hand, Tarski has provided powerful tools for logical analysis in philosophy. His first and most important contribu…Read more
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115On the theory of anaphora: Dynamic predicate logic vs. game-theoretical semantics (review)Linguistics and Philosophy 20 (2): 147-174. 1997.
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113Between proof and truthSynthese 187 (3): 821-832. 2012.We consider two versions of truth as grounded in verification procedures: Dummett's notion of proof as an effective way to establish the truth of a statement and Hintikka's GTS notion of truth as given by the existence of a winning strategy for the game associated with a statement. Hintikka has argued that the two notions should be effective and that one should thus restrict one's attention to recursive winning strategies. In the context of arithmetic, we show that the two notions do not coincid…Read more
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176Joint action and group action made preciseSynthese 105 (3). 1995.The paper argues that there are two main kinds of joint action, direct joint bringing about (or performing) something (expressed in terms of a DO-operator) and jointly seeing to it that something is the case (expressed in terms of a Stit-operator). The former kind of joint action contains conjunctive, disjunctive and sequential action and its central subkinds. While joint seeing to it that something is the case is argued to be necessarily intentional, direct joint performance can also be noninte…Read more
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66If Logic, Game-Theoretical Semantics, and the Philosophy of ScienceIn S. Rahman (ed.), Logic, Epistemology, and the Unity of Science, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 105--138. 2004.
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58The logic of informational independence and finite modelsLogic Journal of the IGPL 5 (1): 79-95. 1997.In this paper we relax the assumption that the logical constants of ordinary first-order logic be linearly ordered. As a consequence, we shall have formulas involving not only partially ordered quantifiers, but also partially ordered connectives. The resulting language, called the language of informational independence will be given an interpretation in terms of games of imperfect information. The II-logic will be seen to have some interesting properties: It is very natural to define in this log…Read more
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168Deflationism and arithmetical truthDialectica 58 (3). 2004.Deflationists have argued that truth is an ontologically thin property which has only an expressive function to perform, that is, it makes possible to express semantic generalizations like 'All the theorems are true', 'Everything Peter said is true', etc. Some of the deflationists have also argued that although truth is ontologically thin, it suffices in conjunctions with other facts not involving truth to explain all the facts about truth. The purpose of this paper is to show that in the case o…Read more
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49Quantification and Anaphora in Natural LanguageIn Richard Schantz (ed.), Prospects for Meaning, De Gruyter. pp. 609-628. 2012.
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51On a Combination of Truth and Probability: Probabilistic Independence-Friendly LogicIn Alexandru Manafu (ed.), The Prospects for Fusion Emergence, Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, Vol. 313. 2015.
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2We fix a family of actions A which represents the set of possible choices of the players in a game. A sequence (a1, ..., an) of actions represents the consecutive choices of the players, ai ∈ A.
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University of HelsinkiDepartment of Philosophy (Theoretical Philosophy, Practical Philosophy, Philosophy in Swedish)Retired faculty
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Language |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |