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A Logical Approach to Philosoph: Essays in Honour of Graham Solomon

David Devidi ; Tim Kenyon (eds.)

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-3533-3

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-4054-2

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2006

Tabla de contenidos

Introduction

David DeVidi; Tim Kenyon

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 1-21

Externalism, Anti-Realism, and the KK-Thesis

Stewart Shapiro

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 22-35

Choice Principles in Intuitionistic Set Theory

John L. Bell

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 36-44

Assertion, Proof, and the Axiom of Choice

David DeVidi

Where does this leave us? First, Williamson has not shown that an assertion theoretic account of meaning is impossible because of a commitment to luminosity. For as the PAT view demonstrates by its existence, it is possible to hold to a view that the meaning of a proposition is determined by its assertion conditions without thereby committing oneself to the luminosity of those assertion conditions. What Dummett insists on, and what he claims a realist, truth-conditional theory of meaning cannot obviously explain, is that a speaker should know the meanings of the sentences understood. So what is required is knowledge of the assertion conditions of these sentences. That, as we’ve seen, can be formulated in the manner employed by Martin-Löf and Tait, under which such knowledge doesn’t require luminosity, i.e., one in which it is possible that a speaker be mistaken in all the expected ways about whether those conditions obtain in a particular case.

However, as we have also seen, there are serious deficiencies with PAT if it is offered as an account of mathematical meaning. In particular, the supposition that all propositions have their meanings given by what counts as a canonical proof seems unlikely to be able to give us a story about the meaning of everything which ought to count as a meaningful mathematical statement. While this version of the assertion theoretic account of the meaning of mathematical sentences doesn’t fall prey to Williamson’s objections, I think the facts reviewed above suggest that it’s a much more seriously constrained account of mathematical meaning than is sometimes recognized.

Pp. 45-76

Montague’s Modal Completeness Theorem of 1955

B. Jack Copeland

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 77-83

On the Rational Reconstruction of Our Theoretical Knowledge

William Demopoulos

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 84-127

Do We have the Right Limitative Theorems?

A. P. Hazen

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 128-150

Empirical Negation in Intuitionistic Logic

Graham Solomon; David DeVidi

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 151-168

Negation’s Holiday: Aspectival Dialetheism

J C Beall

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 169-192

Monism: The One True Logic

Stephen Read

Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.

Pp. 193-209