Search results for 'Walter M. Langford' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Walter M. Langford (1942). Concerning Latin American Culture. Thought 17 (1):160-161.score: 290.0
  2. Walter M. Langford (1937). Mexican Martyrdom. Thought 12 (1):138-140.score: 290.0
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  3. M. J. Langford (1992). Who Should Get the Kidney Machine? Journal of Medical Ethics 18 (1):12-17.score: 120.0
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  4. Alasdair Urquhart (2011). Henry M. Sheffer and Notational Relativity. History and Philosophy of Logic 33 (1):33 - 47.score: 21.0
    Henry M. Sheffer is well known to logicians for the discovery (or rather, the rediscovery) of the ?Sheffer stroke? of propositional logic. But what else did Sheffer contribute to logic? He published very little, though he is known to have been carrying on a rather mysterious research program in logic; the only substantial result of this research was the unpublished monograph The General Theory of Notational Relativity. The main aim of this paper is to explain, as far as possible (given (...)
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  5. Michael Scanlan (1991). Who Were the American Postulate Theorists? Journal of Symbolic Logic 56 (3):981-1002.score: 12.0
    Articles by two American mathematicians, E. V. Huntington and Oswald Veblen, are discussed as examples of a movement in foundational research in the period 1900-1930 called American postulate theory. This movement also included E. H. Moore, R. L. Moore, C. H. Langford, H. M. Sheffer, C. J. Keyser, and others. The articles discussed exemplify American postulate theorists' standards for axiomatizations of mathematical theories, and their investigations of such axiomatizations with respect to metatheoretic properties such as independence, completeness, and consistency.
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  6. M. Dusche (1995). Interpreted Logical Forms as Objects of the Attitudes. Journal of Logic, Language and Information 4 (4):301-315.score: 6.0
    Two arguments favoring propositionalist accounts of attitude sentences are being revisited: the Church-Langford translation argument and Thomason's argument against quotational theories of indirect discourse. None of them proves to be decisive, thus leaving the option of searching for a developed quotational alternative. Such an alternative is found in an interpreted logical form theory of attitude ascription. The theory differentiates elegantly among different attitudes but it fails to account for logical dependencies among them. It is argued, however, that the concept (...)
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