Katarzyna Gan Krzywoszyńska. Piotr Leśniewski. Archives Poincaré University of Nancy 2 France

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Katarzyna Gan Krzywoszyńska Archives Poincaré University of Nancy 2 France Piotr Leśniewski Department of Logic and Methodology of Science Adam Mickiewicz University Poland

K. Gan Krzywoszyńska Change, Development and Progress. Prof. Roman Suszko s Study in Dynamics of Scientific Theories, in: J Y. Béziau & A. Costa Leite eds., Dimensions of Logical Concepts, Coleção CLE, vol. 55, 2009, Campinas, Brasil, pp. 231 236. K. Gan Krzywoszyńska & P. Leśniewski Logic, a contribution to The Language of Science. ISSN 1971 1352. Monza: Polimetrica, version on line: http://www.polimetrica.eu/site/?p=78. K. Gan Krzywoszyńska & P. Leśniewski On Existence and some Ontologies, «Ruch Filozoficzny», 2009, No 1, pp. 71 79. P. Leśniewski & Z. Tworak Collective Epistemic Logic, in: eds. A. Wiśniewski, J. Zygmunt, Erotetic logic, deontic logic and other logical matters. Essays in Memory of Tadeusz Kubiński, LOGIKA 17, Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis, No 1890, Wrocław 1997, pp. 90 102. P. Leśniewski On the Generalized Reducibility of Questions, in: ed. J. Nida Rümelin, Rationality, Realism, Revision. Proceedings of the 3 rd International Congress of the Society for Analytical Philosophy (September 15 18, 1997, in Munich), PERSPECTIVES IN ANALYTICAL PHILOSOPHY, vol. 23, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin New York 2000, pp. 119 126. P. Leśniewski Values in Social Structures. An outline of a Formal Study, in: ed. E. Czerwińska Schupp, Values and Norms in the Age of Globalization, O Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main Berlin Bern Bruxelles New York Oxford Wien 2007, pp. 369 381.

SEMANTIC EPISTEMOLOGY: Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz (1890 1963) DIACHRONIC LOGIC Roman Suszko (1919 1979) CLASSIFICATION OF PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMS Jules Vuillemin (1920 2001)

Ask a foolish question and you get a foolish answer. Nuel D. Belnap Jr. & Thomas B. Steel Jr. The Logic of Questions and Answers New Haven and London Yale University Press 1976 [pp. 132 133]

F[Q]: Q is a foolish question [in M] F[Q]:= A dq, M non A R[Q]: Q is a risky question [in M] R[Q]:= A dq, M non A (or R[Q]:= A dq, M A) S[Q]: Q is a safe question [in M] S[Q]:= A dq, M A P[Q]: Q is a allowable question [in M] P[Q]:= A dq, M A (or P[Q]:= A dq, M non A)

F[Q] S[Q] R[Q] P[Q]

Two erotetic constants:? [question mark] {} [brackets] We can assume for example that L is a first order language with identity supplemented with erotetic constants by means of which questions of the language L are formed. Moreover, we can assume that the set of questions of the language L fulfils for example the following conditions: (1) to each question of L there is assigned an at least two element set of direct answers to this question; (2) the language L contains both finite questions (i.e. questions with finite sets of direct answers); (3) for each sentence A of L there is a question of L (called a simple yes no question) whose set of direct answers consists of the sentence A and its negation A, exclusively.

(Q 1)?{ x (Sx Px); x (Sx Px)}, [POSSIBLE READING:] Is it the case that every S is P? (Q 2)?{ x (Sx Px); x (Sx Px)}, [POSSIBLE READING:] Is it the case that no S is P? (Q 3)?{ x (Sx Px); x (Sx Px)}, [POSSIBLE READING:] Is it the case that some S is P? (Q 4)?{ x (Sx Px); x (Sx Px)}, [POSSIBLE READING:] Is it the case that some S is not P?

(A 1) All S are P. (A 2) There is no S which is a non P. (E 1) No S is P. (E 2) There is no S which is P. (I 1) Some S are P. (I 2) There is an S which is P. (O 1) Some S are not P. (O 2) There is an S which is a non P.

Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz Założenia logiki tradycyjnej Presuppositions of Traditional Logic Przegląd Filozoficzny, (29/1926), pp. 200 229 [in Polish] Adam Wiegner W sprawie założeń i charakteru logiki tradycyjnej About the Presuppositions and Character of Traditional Logic Kwartalnik Filozoficzny (15/1938), pp. 108 122 [in Polish]

The kinds of question we ask are as many as the kinds of things which we know. They are in fact four: (Q 1) whether the connexion of an attribute with a thing is a fact, (Q 2) what is the reason of the connexion, (Q 3) whether a thing exists, (Q 4) what is the nature of the thing. Aristotle Posterior Analytics Translated by G. R. G. Mure

The controversy about the "nature" of questions is not only a conceptual one. If the radical reductionist view is correct, no logic (in the very sense of "logic", as opposed to "logical theory") of questions is possible. If the moderate reductionist view is correct, logic of questions should be developed only within the framework of some other philosophical logic. But if we accept the non reductionist approach, the problem of building (or discovering, as a platonist might say) of the logic of questions remains open. Andrzej Wiśniewski, The Posing of Questions. Logical Foundations of Erotetic Inferences, [p. 42]

[EROTETIC] meta ontological monism: There is only one ontological question. Example: W. V. Quine (Q) What is there?

Descartes asked the fundamental metaphysical question, what is it to be an actual entity? Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality. An Essay in Cosmology [Corrected Edition edited by D. R. Griffin, D. W. Sherburne], The Free Press, New York 1985

The fundamental question that metaphysics strives to answer is What is there?, or, expressed more sententiously, Of what does reality consist?. Michael Dummett Thought and Reality (Lines of Thought), Oxford University Press, New York 2006

What reality is like is the business of scientists, in the broad sense painstakingly to surmise; and what there is, what is real, is a part of that question. The question how we know what there is is simply part of a question, ( ), of the evidence for truth about the world. The last arbiter is so called scientific method, however amorphous. Word and Object, The M. I. T. Press 1960 [p. 22 23]

The problem of categorical sentences as elementary sentences (in the Vuillemin s sense) is of greatest importance to his project. Let us remind that classification of philosophical systems by Vuillemin (V classification, for short) is based on four original assumptions. Firstly, the conviction that language moulds perception is deleted, since perception precedes language. Secondly, Vuillemin firmly claims that Weltanschauung is not a philosophy. Thirdly, the strong continuity between philosophy and common sense is rejected. Last but not least, Vuillemin did not argue for an unique scheme of philosophical truth: he just made forward a suggestion about careful and serious consideration to the question what all possibilities of philosophical truth are. There is no easy answer to the problem.

The V classification is grounded on the fundamental forms of predication. There are five exclusive classes of predications, since the determination of the singular term occurs in respect either: (1) of the general term, or (2) of the singular term itself, or (3) of the material chain of the sentence, or (4) of its syntactical unit, or (5) of its semantic unit. The correlated classes of elementary sentences are: pure predication, substantial and accidental predications, circumstantial predication, judgment of method and judgment of appearances.

The five kinds of identification divide into two major series distinguished in terms of truth, this is: dogmatic series which consists of the first three forms of predications and subjective series, which consists of judgment of method and judgment of appearances. Every form of predication becomes an ontological principle and results in exactly one philosophical system (and/or even exactly one class of them): realism, conceptualism, nominalism (of things and of events, respectively), intuitionism, and skepticism. Systematic ontology requires that: (1) a minimal set of indefinable concepts and indemonstrable principles should be given form which all elements of the world may be derived; (2) this derivation should proceed according to legitimated rules, and (3) rival ontologies should be explained away as mere appearances

For what the progress of analytic philosophy has succeeded in establishing that there are no grounds for belief in universal necessary principles outside purely formal enquiries except relative to some set of assumptions. Cartesian first principles, Kantian a priori truths and even the ghosts of these notions that haunted empiricism for so long have all been expelled from philosophy. The consequence is that analytic philosophy has become a discipline or a subdiscipline? whose competence has been restricted to the study of inferences. A. MacIntyre After Virtue. A Study in Moral Theory University of Notre Dame Notre Dame 2003 [p. 266 267]

Thank you for your attention.