A Note on Carnap’s Result and the Connectives

Axiomathes 29 (3):285-288 (2019)
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Abstract

Carnap’s result about classical proof-theories not ruling out non-normal valuations of propositional logic formulae has seen renewed philosophical interest in recent years. In this note I contribute some considerations which may be helpful in its philosophical assessment. I suggest a vantage point from which to see the way in which classical proof-theories do, at least to a considerable extent, encode the meanings of the connectives (not by determining a range of admissible valuations, but in their own way), and I demonstrate a kind of converse to Carnap’s result.

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Tristan Grøtvedt Haze
University of Melbourne

Citations of this work

How May the Propositional Calculus Represent?Tristan Haze - 2017 - South American Journal of Logic 3 (1):173-184.

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References found in this work

Formalization of logic.Rudolf Carnap - 1943 - Cambridge, Mass.,: Harvard university press.
Truth as One and Many.Michael Patrick Lynch - 2009 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
Speech Acts, Categoricity, and the Meanings of Logical Connectives.Ole Thomassen Hjortland - 2014 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 55 (4):445-467.

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