Logic at the Crossroads (set): Proof, Computation and Agency Games, Norms and Reasons
Editat de Amitabha Gupta, Rohit Parikh, Johan van Benthem, Eric Pacuiten Limba Engleză Carte – 30 sep 2012
Proof, Computation and Agency: Logic at the Cross Roads provides an overview of Logic and its relationship with other disciplines, and some of the emerging areas in terms. The volume brings out an inspiring paradigm, called 'Social Software', the study of patterns of social interaction by means of techniques from logic and computer science. Besides, it demonstrates how an extended view of logic can join forces with the social sciences, game theory or social choice theory, in studying patterns and procedures in social agency, and systematizing this field. Moreover, the study of Logic-Language- Cognition connection forms an important component of the fresh approach the volume.
Finally, the volume explores the nature of the contributions made in Indian tradition in logic by demonstrating that the validity of inference is not a purely formal notion and logic could be placed in the context of epistemology and the Indian scientific tradition. The book takes up Indian logic in its connections with philosophical epistemology and the philosophy of science and exhibits how topics ran naturally into each other.
Games, Norms and Reasons
The explanation as to why logic is perceived as standing at the crossroads has to do with fact that in the recent past logic, in relationship with several academic disciplines closely related to it, has been a catalyst in giving rise to new research programmes or even innovative academic fields.
Games, Norms, and Reasons: Logic at the Crossroads provides an overview of Logic and its relationship with other disciplines, and some of the emerging areas in terms of leading articles by pioneers in the field. The first part of this is devoted to exploring aspects of norms, reasons, preferences and beliefs in human agency, human interaction or structured groups, sometimes using the logic of games or by developing novel frameworks, concepts and ideas appropriate for such exploration. The papers in the second part of the volume are dedicated to Rohit Parikh who embodies some of the new trends in the explorations mentioned above that are not only seminal, but shaped the direction of a field, sometimes even creating it.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789400709201
ISBN-10: 940070920X
Pagini: 650
Ilustrații: Approx. 650 p. 2 volume-set.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2012
Editura: SPRINGER NETHERLANDS
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Dordrecht, Netherlands
ISBN-10: 940070920X
Pagini: 650
Ilustrații: Approx. 650 p. 2 volume-set.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2012
Editura: SPRINGER NETHERLANDS
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Dordrecht, Netherlands
Public țintă
ResearchCuprins
Volume I: Proof, Computation and Agency
Preface.- Introduction.- I LOGIC TODAY: SOME REFLECTIONS.- 1. What is Mathematical Logic? A Survey; John N. Crossley.- 2. Is there a Logic of Society?; Rohit Parikh.- II LOGIC AND MATHEMATICS.- 3. What is a Proof?; John N. Crossley.- 4. A Visit to Tarski's Seminar on Elimination of Quantifiers; Wilfrid Hodges.- 5. Deductive Systems of Fuzzy Logic; Petr Hajek.- III LOGIC AND COMPUTATION.- 6. What is the difference between Proofs and Programs?; John N. Crossley.- 7. Zero-One Laws: Thesauri and Parametric Conditions; Yuri Gurevich and Andreas Blass.- 8. Recent Developments of Feedback Coding, and its relations with Many-valued Logic; Daniele Mundici and Ferdinando Cicalese.- 9. Two Applications of Epistemic Logic in Computer Security; Ron van der Meyden.- 10. An Introduction to Quantum Computing; Noson Yanofsky.- IV LOGIC, AGENCY AND GAMES.- 11. Logic Games: From Tools to Models of Interaction; Johan van Benthem.- 12. Iterated Belief Revision in Dynamic Doxastic Logic; Krister Segerberg.- 13. Towards a Logical Analysis of Adjusted Winner; Eric Pacuit.- 14. Temporal Logic with Preferences and Reasoning about Games; G. Venkatesh.- V LOGIC, LANGUAGE AND COGNITION.- 15. From Sentence Meanings to Full Semantics; Wilfrid Hodges.- 16. Some Reflections on Discrete Mathematical Models in Behavioral, Cognitive and Social Sciences; D. B. Acharya and Shalini Joshi.- VI PERSPECTIVES FROM INDIAN LOGIC.- 17. Indian Logic: An Overview; K. Ramasubramanian.- 18. Indian Logic and Philosophy of Science: the Logic-Epistemology Link; Sundar Sarukkai.- 19. The Concept of ‘Hetvabhasa’ in Nyaya-sastra; K. Ramasubramanian.- Notes on Contributors. Bibliography.
Volume II: Games, Norms and Reasons
Preface.- Introduction.- PART I.- 1. Why Meaning Intentions are Degenerate; Akeel Bilgrami.- 2. Redoing the Foundations of Decision Theory; Lawrence E. Blume, David A. Easley and Joseph Y. Halpern.- 3. A Noteon Adjusted Winner; Eric Pacuit, Rohit Parikh and Samer Salame.- 4. Modal Logic for Lexicographic Preference Aggregation; Patrick Girard.- 5. Syllogistic Logic with Complements; Lawrence Moss.- 6. Introduction to Unary Inductive Logic; Jeff Paris.- 7. From Unary to Binary Inductive Logic; Jeff Paris and A. Vencovska.- 8. Merging Information; Sujata Ghosh and Fernando R. Velazquez-Quesada.- 9. Challenges for Decidable Epistemic Logics from Security Protocols; R. Ramanujam and S.P. Suresh.- PART II.- Introduction: Tribute to Rohit Parikh.- 1. No-fi -Regret: A Connection between Computational Learning Theory and Game Theory; Amy Greenwald, Amir Jafari and Casey Marks.- 2. Why Do We Need Justification Logic?; Sergei Artemov.- 3. The Realization Theorem for S5: A Simple, Constructive Proof; Melvin Fitting.- 4. A Proof-Theoretic Approach to Mathematical Knowledge Management; Dexter Kozen and Ganesh Ramanarayanan.- 5. From Parikh's Theorem to Many-Sorted Spectra; Johann A. Makowsky.- 6. A Fresh Look at Propositional Dynamic Logic and Game Logic; Jan van Eijck and Rineke Verbrugge.- 7. Bounded Rationality: Models for some Fast and Frugal Heuristics; Horacio Arlo-Costa and Arthur Paul Pedersen.- 8. Axiom of Distinction in Social Software; Vincent F. Hendricks.- Notes on the Contributors.
Preface.- Introduction.- I LOGIC TODAY: SOME REFLECTIONS.- 1. What is Mathematical Logic? A Survey; John N. Crossley.- 2. Is there a Logic of Society?; Rohit Parikh.- II LOGIC AND MATHEMATICS.- 3. What is a Proof?; John N. Crossley.- 4. A Visit to Tarski's Seminar on Elimination of Quantifiers; Wilfrid Hodges.- 5. Deductive Systems of Fuzzy Logic; Petr Hajek.- III LOGIC AND COMPUTATION.- 6. What is the difference between Proofs and Programs?; John N. Crossley.- 7. Zero-One Laws: Thesauri and Parametric Conditions; Yuri Gurevich and Andreas Blass.- 8. Recent Developments of Feedback Coding, and its relations with Many-valued Logic; Daniele Mundici and Ferdinando Cicalese.- 9. Two Applications of Epistemic Logic in Computer Security; Ron van der Meyden.- 10. An Introduction to Quantum Computing; Noson Yanofsky.- IV LOGIC, AGENCY AND GAMES.- 11. Logic Games: From Tools to Models of Interaction; Johan van Benthem.- 12. Iterated Belief Revision in Dynamic Doxastic Logic; Krister Segerberg.- 13. Towards a Logical Analysis of Adjusted Winner; Eric Pacuit.- 14. Temporal Logic with Preferences and Reasoning about Games; G. Venkatesh.- V LOGIC, LANGUAGE AND COGNITION.- 15. From Sentence Meanings to Full Semantics; Wilfrid Hodges.- 16. Some Reflections on Discrete Mathematical Models in Behavioral, Cognitive and Social Sciences; D. B. Acharya and Shalini Joshi.- VI PERSPECTIVES FROM INDIAN LOGIC.- 17. Indian Logic: An Overview; K. Ramasubramanian.- 18. Indian Logic and Philosophy of Science: the Logic-Epistemology Link; Sundar Sarukkai.- 19. The Concept of ‘Hetvabhasa’ in Nyaya-sastra; K. Ramasubramanian.- Notes on Contributors. Bibliography.
Volume II: Games, Norms and Reasons
Preface.- Introduction.- PART I.- 1. Why Meaning Intentions are Degenerate; Akeel Bilgrami.- 2. Redoing the Foundations of Decision Theory; Lawrence E. Blume, David A. Easley and Joseph Y. Halpern.- 3. A Noteon Adjusted Winner; Eric Pacuit, Rohit Parikh and Samer Salame.- 4. Modal Logic for Lexicographic Preference Aggregation; Patrick Girard.- 5. Syllogistic Logic with Complements; Lawrence Moss.- 6. Introduction to Unary Inductive Logic; Jeff Paris.- 7. From Unary to Binary Inductive Logic; Jeff Paris and A. Vencovska.- 8. Merging Information; Sujata Ghosh and Fernando R. Velazquez-Quesada.- 9. Challenges for Decidable Epistemic Logics from Security Protocols; R. Ramanujam and S.P. Suresh.- PART II.- Introduction: Tribute to Rohit Parikh.- 1. No-fi -Regret: A Connection between Computational Learning Theory and Game Theory; Amy Greenwald, Amir Jafari and Casey Marks.- 2. Why Do We Need Justification Logic?; Sergei Artemov.- 3. The Realization Theorem for S5: A Simple, Constructive Proof; Melvin Fitting.- 4. A Proof-Theoretic Approach to Mathematical Knowledge Management; Dexter Kozen and Ganesh Ramanarayanan.- 5. From Parikh's Theorem to Many-Sorted Spectra; Johann A. Makowsky.- 6. A Fresh Look at Propositional Dynamic Logic and Game Logic; Jan van Eijck and Rineke Verbrugge.- 7. Bounded Rationality: Models for some Fast and Frugal Heuristics; Horacio Arlo-Costa and Arthur Paul Pedersen.- 8. Axiom of Distinction in Social Software; Vincent F. Hendricks.- Notes on the Contributors.
Caracteristici
Volume I: Proof, Computation and Agency: Brings out an inspiring paradigm, called 'Social Software', the study of patterns of social interaction by means of techniques from logic and computer science Demonstrates how an extended view of logic can join forces with the social sciences, game theory or social choice theory, in studying patterns and procedures in social agency, and systematizing this field Represents a unique meeting between Indian logicians and an elite of international colleagues who have been involved with the current renaissance of Logic in India Volume II: Games, Norms and Reasons: Consists of first-rate papers by a remarkable group of internationally prominent authors interacting with their Indian colleagues and upcoming young researchers worldwide Highlights emerging research programmes and new academic fields by exploring aspects of norms, reasons, preferences and beliefs in human agency Includes a Festschrift dedicated to Rohit Parikh commemorating his 70th birthday. This collection of essays, written by his colleagues and friends, reflects both the impact of his work and his long and distinguished academic career that continues to be productive and influential