Logic Colloquium '96
Since their inception, the Perspectives in Logic and Lecture Notes in Logic series have published seminal works by leading logicians. Many of the original books in the series have been unavailable for years, but they are now in print once again. This volume, the twelfth publication in the Lecture Notes in Logic series, collects the proceedings of the European Summer Meeting of the Association of Symbolic Logic, held at the University of the Basque Country, San Sebastian in July 1996. The main topics were model theory, proof theory, recursion and complexity theory, models of arithmetic, logic for artificial intelligence, formal semantics of natural language, and philosophy of contemporary logic. The volume includes eleven papers from pre-eminent researchers in mathematical logic.
- Contains eleven papers on mathematical logic by leading researchers
- Covers all core areas of mathematical logic, as well as logic for artificial intelligence, formal semantics of natural language, and philosophy of contemporary logic
- Will be of interest to all researchers and graduate students in mathematical logic
Product details
March 2017Hardback
9781107166080
269 pages
235 × 157 × 25 mm
0.5kg
3 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. The logical foundations of discourse interpretation Nicholas Asher
- 2. Complete sets and structure in subrecursive classes Harry Burhman and Leen Torenvliet
- 3. Kernels and cohomology groups for some finite covers David M. Evans and Darren G. D. Gray
- 4. On 'star' schemata of Kossak and Paris Vladimir Kanovei
- 5. Arithmetizing proofs in analysis Ulrich Kohlenbach
- 6. Satisfaction classes and automorphisms of models of PA Roman Kossak
- 7. Free monoid completeness of the Lambek calculus allowing empty premises M. Pentus
- 8. Simple groups definable in O-minimal structures Ya'acov Peterzil, Anand Pillay and Sergei Starchenko
- 9. Two-dimensional temporal logic Mark Reynolds
- 10. Rather classless, highly saturated models of Peano arithmetic James H. Schmerl
- 11. Incompleteness theorems and Si1 vs Si+11 . Gaisi Takeuti.