Logical Consequence and the Paradoxes

Journal of Philosophical Logic 43 (2-3):439-469 (2014)
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Abstract

We group the existing variants of the familiar set-theoretical and truth-theoretical paradoxes into two classes: connective paradoxes, which can in principle be ascribed to the presence of a contracting connective of some sort, and structural paradoxes, where at most the faulty use of a structural inference rule can possibly be blamed. We impute the former to an equivocation over the meaning of logical constants, and the latter to an equivocation over the notion of consequence. Both equivocation sources are tightly related, and can be cleared up by adopting a particular substructural logic in place of classical logic. We then argue that our perspective can be justified via an informational semantics of contraction-free substructural logics

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Author Profiles

Francesco Paoli
Universita di Cagliari
Edwin Mares
Victoria University of Wellington

Citations of this work

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References found in this work

In contradiction: a study of the transconsistent.Graham Priest - 2006 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Logic, semantics, metamathematics.Alfred Tarski - 1956 - Oxford,: Clarendon Press. Edited by John Corcoran & J. H. Woodger.
Saving truth from paradox.Hartry Field - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
The Connectives.Lloyd Humberstone - 2011 - MIT Press. Edited by Lloyd Humberstone.

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