Author(s)
Seuren, Pieter A. M.Keywords
AbelardAristotle
Boethius
Hamilton
natural logic
ontogenesis of logic
Russell
undue existential import
00-22
03A99
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http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.ndjfl/1415382953Abstract
Since Aristotle and the Stoa, there has been a clash, worsened by modern predicate logic, between logically defined operator meanings and natural intuitions. Pragmatics has tried to neutralize the clash by an appeal to the Gricean conversational maxims. The present study argues that the pragmatic attempt has been unsuccessful. The “softness” of the Gricean explanation fails to do justice to the robustness of the intuitions concerned, leaving the relation between the principles evoked and the observed facts opaque. Moreover, there are cases where the Gricean maxims fail to apply. A more adequate solution consists in the devising of a sound natural logic, part of the innate cognitive equipment of mankind. This account has proved successful in conjunction with a postulated cognitive mechanism in virtue of which the universe of discourse (Un) is stepwise and recursively restricted, so that the negation selects different complements according to the degree of restrictedness of Un. This mechanism explains not only the discrepancies between natural logical intuitions and known logical systems; it also accounts for certain systematic lexicalization gaps in the languages of the world. Finally, it is shown how stepwise restriction of Un produces the ontogenesis of natural predicate logic, while at the same time resolving the intuitive clashes with established logical systems that the Gricean maxims sought to explain.Date
2014Type
TextIdentifier
oai:CULeuclid:euclid.ndjfl/1415382953http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.ndjfl/1415382953
Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 55, no. 4 (2014), 499-532
doi:10.1215/00294527-2798718
DOI
10.1215/00294527-2798718Copyright/License
Copyright 2014 University of Notre Dameae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1215/00294527-2798718