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  1. Incompleteness, mechanism, and optimism.Stewart Shapiro - 1998 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 4 (3):273-302.
    §1. Overview. Philosophers and mathematicians have drawn lots of conclusions from Gödel's incompleteness theorems, and related results from mathematical logic. Languages, minds, and machines figure prominently in the discussion. Gödel's theorems surely tell us something about these important matters. But what?A descriptive title for this paper would be “Gödel, Lucas, Penrose, Turing, Feferman, Dummett, mechanism, optimism, reflection, and indefinite extensibility”. Adding “God and the Devil” would probably be redundant. Despite the breath-taking, whirlwind tour, I have the modest aim of forging (...)
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  • Self-reference and incompleteness in a non-monotonic setting.Timothy G. Mccarthy - 1994 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 23 (4):423 - 449.
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  • Experimental Logics, Mechanism and Knowable Consistency.Martin Kaså - 2012 - Theoria 78 (3):213-224.
    In a paper published in 1975, Robert Jeroslow introduced the concept of an experimental logic as a generalization of ordinary formal systems such that theoremhood is a (or in practice ) rather than . These systems can be viewed as (rather crude) representations of axiomatic theories evolving stepwise over time. Similar ideas can be found in papers by Putnam (1965) and McCarthy and Shapiro (1987). The topic of the present article is a discussion of a suggestion by Allen Hazen, that (...)
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  • A Logic for Trial and Error Classifiers.Martin Kaså - 2015 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 24 (3):307-322.
    Trial and error classifiers, corresponding to concepts which change their extensions over time, are introduced and briefly philosophically motivated. A fragment of the language of classical first-order logic is given a new semantics, using \-sequences of classical models, in order to interpret the basic predicates as classifiers of this kind. It turns out that we can use a natural deduction proof system which differs from classical logic only in the conditions for application of existential elimination. Soundness and completeness theorems are (...)
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  • Trial and error mathematics I: Dialectical and quasidialectical systems.Jacopo Amidei, Duccio Pianigiani, Luca San Mauro, Giulia Simi & Andrea Sorbi - 2016 - Review of Symbolic Logic 9 (2):299-324.