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  1. The concept of truth in formalized languages.Alfred Tarski - 1956 - In Logic, semantics, metamathematics. Oxford,: Clarendon Press. pp. 152--278.
  • What is formal in formal semantics?Jan Woleński - 2004 - Dialectica 58 (3):427–436.
    Formal semantics is understood either as a formal analysis of semantical features of natural language or as model-theoretic semantics of formal(ized) languages. This paper focuses on the second understanding. The problem is how to identify the formal aspects of formal semantics, if we understand ‘formal’ as ‘independent of content’. This is done by showing that the form of semantical interpretation of a language L is given by its syntax and the parallelism of the signature of L and its interpretative structure (...)
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  • Logic as Calculus and Logic as Language.Jean Van Heijenoort - 1967 - Synthese 17 (1):324-330.
  • On the development of the model-theoretic viewpoint in logical theory.Jaakko Hintikka - 1988 - Synthese 77 (1):1 - 36.
  • Logic as calculus and logic as language.Jean Heijenoort - 1967 - Synthese 17 (1):324 - 330.
  • Language as Calculus vs. Language as Universal Medium: A Study in Husserl, Heidegger and Gadamer.Maren Kusch - 1989 - Springer Verlag.
    I first became interested in Husserl and Heidegger as long ago as 1980, when as an undergraduate at the Freie Universitat Berlin I studied the books by Professor Ernst Tugendhat. Tugendhat's at tempt to bring together analytical and continental philosophy has never ceased to fascinate me, and even though in more recent years other influences have perhaps been stronger, I should like to look upon the present study as still being indebted to Tugendhat's initial incentive. It was my good fortune (...)
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  • The Birth of Model Theory: Lowenheim's Theorem in the Frame of the Theory of Relatives.Calixto Badesa - 2004 - Princeton University Press.
    Löwenheim's theorem reflects a critical point in the history of mathematical logic, for it marks the birth of model theory--that is, the part of logic that concerns the relationship between formal theories and their models. However, while the original proofs of other, comparably significant theorems are well understood, this is not the case with Löwenheim's theorem. For example, the very result that scholars attribute to Löwenheim today is not the one that Skolem--a logician raised in the algebraic tradition, like Löwenheim--appears (...)
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  • Formal semantics: an introduction.Ronnie Cann - 1993 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    This accessible introduction to formal, and especially Montague, semantics within a linguistic framework, presupposes no previous background in logic, but takes students step-by-step from simple predicate/argument structures and their interpretation to Montague's intentional logic.
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  • Introduction to a general theory of elementary propositions.Emil L. Post - 1921 - American Journal of Mathematics 43 (3):163--185.
    In the general theory of logic built up by Whitehead and Russell to furnish a basis for all mathematics there is a certain subtheory which is unique in its simplicity and precision; and though all other portions of the work have their roots in this subtheory, it itself is completely independent of them. Whereas the complete theory requires for the enunciation of its propositions real and apparent variables, which represent both individuals and propositional functions of different kinds, and as a (...)
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  • Toward Finitist Proof Theory.Wilfried Sieg - unknown
    This is a summary of developments analysed in my (1997A). A first version of that paper was presented at the workshop Modern Mathematical Thought in Pittsburgh (September 21-24, 1995).
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