000 02661nam a22003015i 4500
001 91402
005 20231026104137.0
010 _a978-3-031-22330-3
_dcompra
090 _a91402
100 _a20231023d2022 k||y0pory50 ba
101 0 _aeng
102 _aCH
200 1 _aLogic - language - ontology
_bDocumento eletrónico
_eselected works
_fby Urszula B. Wybraniec-Skardowska
210 _aCham
_cSpringer Nature Switzerland
_cBirkhäuser
_d2022
215 _aXIII, 300 p.
_cil.
225 2 _aStudies in Universal Logic
303 _aHow should we think about the meaning of the words that make up our language? How does reference of these terms work, and what is their referent when these are connected to abstract objects rather than to concrete ones? Can logic help to address these questions? This collection of papers aims to unify the questions of syntax and semantics of language, which span across the fields of logic, philosophy and ontology of language. The leading motif of the presented selection is the differentiation between linguistic tokens (material, concrete objects) on the one hand and linguistic types (ideal, abstract objects) on the other. Through a promenade among articles that span over all of the Author's career, this book addresses the complex philosophical question of the ontology of language by following the crystalline conceptual tools offered by logic. At the core of Wybraniec-Skardowska's scholarship is the idea that language is an ontological being, characterized in compliance with the logical conception of language proposed by Ajdukiewicz. The application throughout the book of tools of classical logic and set theory results fosters the emergence of a general formal logical theory of syntax, semantics and of the pragmatics of language, which takes into account the duality token-type in the understanding of linguistic expressions. Via a functional approach to language itself, logic appears as ontologically neutral with respect to existential assumptions relating to the nature of linguistic expressions and their extra-linguistic counterparts. The book is addressed to readers both at the graduate and undergraduate level, but also to a more general audience interested in getting a firmer grip on the interplay between reality and the language we use to describe and understand it.
606 _aMathematics
_xPhilosophy
606 _aMathematical logic
606 _aLogic
606 _aSet theory
680 _aQA8-10.4
700 1 _aWybraniec-Skardowska
_bUrszula B.
801 0 _aPT
_gRPC
856 4 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-22330-3
942 _2lcc
_cF
_n0