-
322The collapse of the Hilbert program: why a system cannot prove its own 1-consistency (Abstract)Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 15 (2): 229-231. 2009.
-
85Review: Kit Fine, Failures of the Interpolation Lemma in Quantified Modal Logic (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 48 (2): 486-488. 1983.
-
543Philosophical Troubles: Collected Papers, Volume 1 (edited book)Oup Usa. 2011.This important new book is the first of a series of volumes collecting the essential articles by the eminent and highly influential philosopher Saul A. Kripke. It presents a mixture of published and unpublished articles from various stages of Kripke's storied career.
-
1292Wittgenstein on rules and private language: an elementary expositionHarvard University Press. 1982.In this book Saul Kripke brings his powerful philosophical intelligence to bear on Wittgenstein's analysis of the notion of following a rule
-
264Semantical Analysis of Modal Logic II. Non-Normal Modal Propositional CalculiIn J. W. Addison (ed.), The theory of models, North-holland Pub. Co.. pp. 206-20. 1965.
-
474The Church-Turing ‘Thesis’ as a Special Corollary of Gödel’s Completeness TheoremIn B. J. Copeland, C. Posy & O. Shagrir (eds.), Computability: Gödel, Turing, Church, and beyond, Mit Press. 2013.Traditionally, many writers, following Kleene (1952), thought of the Church-Turing thesis as unprovable by its nature but having various strong arguments in its favor, including Turing’s analysis of human computation. More recently, the beauty, power, and obvious fundamental importance of this analysis, what Turing (1936) calls “argument I,” has led some writers to give an almost exclusive emphasis on this argument as the unique justification for the Church-Turing thesis. In this chapter I advoc…Read more
-
536Is There a Problem About Substitutional Quantification?In Gareth Evans & John McDowell (eds.), Truth and meaning: essays in semantics, Clarendon Press. pp. 324-419. 1976.
-
175The Road to GödelIn Jonathan Berg (ed.), Naming, Necessity and More: Explorations in the Philosophical Work of Saul Kripke, Palgrave. 2014.
-
558Russell’s Notion of ScopeMind 114 (456): 1005-1037. 2005.Despite the renown of ‘On Denoting’, much criticism has ignored or misconstrued Russell's treatment of scope, particularly in intensional, but also in extensional contexts. This has been rectified by more recent commentators, yet it remains largely unnoticed that the examples Russell gives of scope distinctions are questionable or inconsistent with his own philosophy. Nevertheless, Russell is right: scope does matter in intensional contexts. In Principia Mathematica, Russell proves a metatheorem…Read more
-
2C. The Mental-Physical ContrastIn David M. Rosenthal (ed.), The Nature of Mind, Oxford University Press. pp. 236. 1991.
-
3Selection from Naming and NecessityIn Tim Crane & Katalin Farkas (eds.), Metaphysics: a guide and anthology, Oxford University Press. 2004.
-
1269Reference and Existence: The John Locke LecturesOxford University Press. 2013.Reference and Existence, Saul Kripke's John Locke Lectures for 1973, can be read as a sequel to his classic Naming and Necessity. It confronts important issues left open in that work -- among them, the semantics of proper names and natural kind terms as they occur in fiction and in myth; negative existential statements; the ontology of fiction and myth. In treating these questions, he makes a number of methodological observations that go beyond the framework of his earlier book -- including the …Read more
Saul Kripke
(1940 - 2022)
New York City, New York, United States of America
Areas of Interest
7 more